


She also began a relationship with Dorothy Freeman, a married summer resident. In 1955, she published The Edge of the Sea, another popular seller. She won a National Book Award, a national science writing-prize and a Guggenheim grant, which, with the book’s sales, enabled her to move to Southport Island, Maine in 1953 to concentrate on writing. Meanwhile, she wrote several popular books about aquatic life, among them Under the Sea Wind (1941) and The Sea Around Us (1951). The latter was serialized in the New Yorker and sold well worldwide. She was promoted to Editor-in-Chief of all publications for the US Fish and Wildlife Service. She remained there for 15 years, writing brochures and other materials for the public. Strained family finances forced her to forego pursuit of a doctorate and help support her mother and, later, two orphaned nieces.Īfter outscoring all other applicants on the civil service exam, in 1936 Carson became the second woman hired by the US Bureau of Fisheries. She next studied at the oceanographic institute at Woods Hole, Massachusetts and at Johns Hopkins University, where she received a master’s degree in zoology in 1932. She attended the Pennsylvania College for Women (now Chatham University), graduating magna cum laude in 1929. She developed a love of nature from her mother, and Carson became a published writer for children’s magazines by age 10.

Outlining the dangers of chemical pesticides, the book led to a nationwide ban on DDT and other pesticides and sparked the movement that ultimately led to the creation of the US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).īorn on on a farm in Springdale, Pennsylvania, Carson was the youngest of Robert and Maria McLean Carson’s three children. A marine biologist and nature writer, Rachel Carson catalyzed the global environmental movement with her 1962 book Silent Spring.
