Bret Sturtevant recounts her family life and schooling in Washington,
D.C. at Holton-Arms School and then at Wellesley College, where she
graduated in 1942. As chemistry major, she was recruited to work for
DuPont in Wilmington, Delaware. Women with bachelor’s degrees were later
told they’d need Ph.D.’s if they wanted to keep their jobs after the
war. She was more interested in law though, and DuPont paid for her to
earn a law degree part-time at Temple University. When she completed the
degree, however, the DuPont law department wouldn’t hire her for a
professional position so she went into private practice and became a
patent litigator. In 1971, she was appointed Patent Examiner-in-Chief,
the first woman to hold that position on the Board of Patent Appeals and
Interferences of the U.S. Patent Office. Sturtevant describes her
introduction to Barbara Franklin, and the beginning of their long
friendship at that time. She also discusses the origins of Executive
Women in Government, begun as a networking opportunity by Barbara
Franklin, and also her role as an adjunct professor of law at Georgetown
University.