Anne-Marcelle Kahn

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Born
Anne-Marcelle Schrameck

(1896-06-04)4 June 1896
Paris, France
Died28 June 1965(1965-06-28) (aged 69)
Paris, France
OccupationMining engineer
Marcelle Kahn
Born
Anne-Marcelle Schrameck

(1896-06-04)4 June 1896
Paris, France
Died28 June 1965(1965-06-28) (aged 69)
Paris, France
OccupationMining engineer
SpouseLouis Kahn
ChildrenTwo sons

Anne-Marcelle Kahn, née Schrameck (4 June 1896 – 28 June 1965) was the first French woman engineer to graduate from l'École nationale supérieure des mines de Saint-Étienne (the National School of Mines of Saint-Étienne), in 1919. She later married Louis Kahn, who became the first Jewish French Admiral, and crossed the Pyrenees alone with her two young children to reach safety during the Second World War.

Anne-Marcelle Schrameck was born on 4 June 1896 in the 7th arrondissement of Paris. She was the daughter of Marguerite Odile Bernheim (1872–1945) and Abraham Schrameck, who was a French Minister of the Interior in the Third Republic. The family were Jewish.[1]

Education

In 1912, Schrameck entered a lyceum.[2] In 1919, Anne-Marcelle Schrameck became the first woman engineering graduate from a major school. Studying at l'École nationale supérieure des mines de Saint-Étienne between 1917 and 1919, she earned the diplôme d’ingénieur civil des mines (diploma of civil engineer of mines).[3]

Following her admission, there was significant debate over the suitability of a woman taking the course as pupils had to undertake an internship as a miner, considered inappropriate for a woman.[4] The school's regulations were subsequently amended to prohibit the admission of women, a situation which lasted for 50 years (until 1968), and during that time no other woman was admitted as an engineering student in a French mining school.[4]

Career

In 1920, Anne-Marcelle Schrameck worked for a time in the Kuhlmann chemical factories in Lorraine.[5][4]

Marriage to Louis Kahn

On 11 July 1922, Anne-Marcelle Schrameck married Louis Kahn, a marine engineer,[6] at the Synagogue de la Victoire in Paris. The couple lived in Brest, then Saïgon then Lorient and had two sons, Pierre (1926–1997) and Jean (1931–2017).[7] Between 1927 and 1929 she was a member of Shakespeare and Company, an English language bookshop in Paris run by Sylvia Beach.[8]

Second World War

Death and legacy

References

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