Adele Racheli
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Adele Racheli (14 July 1897 – 3 January 1992) was an Italian engineer and co-founder of a successful patent protection office in Milan in 1925 to protect the intellectual property of Italian professionals. The firm still thrives.


Biography

Born on 14 July 1897 in
Piacenza Piacenza (; egl, label= Piacentino, Piaṡëinsa ; ) is a city and in the Emilia-Romagna region of northern Italy, and the capital of the eponymous province. As of 2022, Piacenza is the ninth largest city in the region by population, with over ...
, Italy, to Maria Carolina (née Pavesi) and Vitorio Racheli, Adelina Racheli had seven younger siblings. As a way to improve her understanding of the lessons she learned in school, she copied her class notes by hand at night and then sold them to her classmates. In Piacenza, she attended high school and two years of university, but after her family moved to
Milan Milan ( , , Lombard: ; it, Milano ) is a city in northern Italy, capital of Lombardy, and the second-most populous city proper in Italy after Rome. The city proper has a population of about 1.4 million, while its metropolitan city h ...
, she was one of the first women to enrol at the
Polytechnic University of Milan The Polytechnic University of Milan () is the largest technical university in Italy, with about 42,000 students. The university offers undergraduate, graduate and higher education courses in engineering, architecture and design. Founded in 186 ...
, graduating in industrial mechanical engineering in 1920, the first woman to graduate from the course. When she was interviewed in 1985, she admitted that her early fascination with mechanics came from a passion to fix bicycles, which in those days, always broke down. Even so, she commented on her life's achievements saying it mattered little if her family "thought she was crazy." One of Racheli's first jobs was working in a Milan patent office, which became a transformative experience, teaching her the importance of protecting intellectual property. In 1925, she opened her own patent protection office in Milan called the Racheli & Bossi Patent Office, in partnership with a colleague Rosita Bossi. The name of the company has since been shortened to Racheli and now operates two other offices in Italy in addition to the main location in Milan. As of 2020, the company describes itself as a "consultancy firm in industrial and intellectual property, which operates in Italy and abroad also through a selected network of consultants and correspondents." On 26 January 1957, Racheli was a founder of a new organization to support female professionals. To do so, she worked with engineers
Emma Strada Emma Strada (Turin, 18 November 1884 – Turin, 26 September 1970) an Italian civil engineer, was the first woman to obtain a civil engineering degree from the Polytechnic of Turin. She later became the first president of the Italian Association ...
, Anna E. Armour, Ines Del Tetto Noto, Laura Lange, Alessandra Bonfanti Vietti and the architect Vittoria Ilardi, to establish the Italian Association of Women Engineers and Architects (Associazione Italiana Donne Architetto e Ingegnere – AIDIA). The association was first proposed in 1948 by electrical engineer
Maria Artini Maria Artini (1894 – 2 August 1951) was an Italian engineer, the first female university graduate in electrical engineering in Italy and the second female graduate of the Milan Polytechnic. Early life and education Artini was born in Milan, I ...
to help other women who worked in technical fields, but Artini died before AIDIA could be officially started. The 1985 interview was conducted in the elderly Racheli's office where a plaque, hung ten years before, attested to her 50 years of membership in the Order of Engineers. The interviewer described Racheli's career path and daily work schedule this way:
Entered as a simple clerk in a patent office, Adele Racheli has become the owner of one of the most successful in Milan. Today at the age of 91 she still holds the reins of her office, working there for eight hours a day; she doesn't even come home to have lunch. The only problem, at her age, is no longer having a driver's license and no longer being able to visit customers as she once did. But to interrupt her business; it is a hypothesis that she does not even take into consideration: 'Should I stop prematurely?'


Personal life

On 22 February 1923, Racheli married an engineer named Constante Domenighetti who had attended the same university and set up the company Società Italiana Macchine Edili Stradali e Agricole (SIMESA). This led her to change her name to Adele Racheli Domenighetti. In a 1985 interview, she boasted "of having always managed to earn more than him, who was also a mechanical engineer and had his own company to run." The couple had five children, Domenico, twins Dafne and Diana (b. 1929), Daria, and Delfina. During World War Two the family moved to Switzerland to avoid the war after their home and offices were destroyed by bombs in 1943. Adele Racheli Domenighetti died on 3 January 1992.


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Racheli, Adele 1890s births Italian mechanical engineers Italian women engineers Engineers from Milan Polytechnic University of Milan alumni 20th-century Italian engineers 20th-century women engineers 20th-century Italian women 1992 deaths