Margaret Ingels

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Margaret Ingels

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Paris, Bourbon County, Kentucky, United States
Death: December 13, 1971 (79)
Lexington, Fayette County, Kentucky, United States
Place of Burial: 833 West Main Street, Lexington, Fayette County, Kentucky, 40508, United States
Immediate Family:

Daughter of Benjamin Charles Ingels and Mary Agnes Ingels
Sister of Kate Peak; Clara Belle Ingels; Ben C Ingels; Leslie Boone Ingels; Grace Ingels and 1 other

Managed by: Private User
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Immediate Family

About Margaret Ingels

Margaret Ingels, B.S.M.E., 1916; M.S. M. E., 1920; LL.D., 1957

Ingels was an American engineer. She's known as the first female engineering graduate from the University of Kentucky, receiving her Bachelor of Science degree in Mechanical Engineering in 1916.

She was also the second woman engineering graduate in the United States, and the first woman to receive a professional degree of Mechanical Engineer. Her work on air conditioning included developing the effective temperature scale to incorporate humidity and air movement in the equation for human comfort.

Career

Following graduation, she worked for the Chicago Telephone Company in the traffic engineering department. She then left Chicago in 1917 for Pittsburgh and the Carrier Engineering Corporation, where her interest in air conditioning began. She received the Mechanical Engineering professional degree in 1920 and the next year she joined the American Society of Heating and Ventilating Engineers research lab, where she studied air conditioning for six years. "She perfected a new portable machine that determines the amount of germ-laden dust in schoolrooms and public places" while conducting field tests for the New York Commission on School Ventilation. In 1931, she returned to the Carrier-Lyle Corporation where she stayed until her retirement. At Carrier, she "helped perfect the sling psychrometer, which is used to read the relative humidity of the air."

She was a spokesperson for the profession, speaking to more than 12,000 people during more than 200 speeches from 1932 to 1952. In 1940 she was selected as one of 100 women in the United States who had successful careers in fields not open to women in 1840.

The Student Chapter of the Society of Women Engineers at the University of Kentucky established a Fellowship Fund in her memory for students enrolled in a Master of Science or Ph.D. program in an engineering discipline.

She was a member of the executive board of the Children's Bureau in Lexington and a member of the Advisory Committee for the Fayette County Juvenile Court.

Works

  • Ingels, Margaret (1972). Willis Haviland Carrier, father of air conditioning. Technology and society. New York: Arno Press. ISBN 0405047088.
  • Ingels, Margaret (1925). Comparative tests of instruments for determining atmospheric dusts ... Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office.

She wrote more than 45 technical papers, as well as an article titled Petticoats and Slide Rules, which documented "the pioneer American women of the engineering field."

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Margaret Ingels's Timeline

1892
October 25, 1892
Paris, Bourbon County, Kentucky, United States
1971
December 13, 1971
Age 79
Lexington, Fayette County, Kentucky, United States
????
Lexington Cemetery, 833 West Main Street, Lexington, Fayette County, Kentucky, 40508, United States