Julia Brainerd Hall (November 11, 1859 – September 4, 1926)
was the sister of American scientist
Charles Martin Hall
Charles Martin Hall (December 6, 1863 – December 27, 1914) was an American inventor, businessman, and chemist. He is best known for his invention in 1886 of an inexpensive method for producing aluminum, which became the first metal to atta ...
. She supported him in his discovery of the
Hall process for extracting
aluminium
Aluminium (aluminum in American and Canadian English) is a chemical element with the symbol Al and atomic number 13. Aluminium has a density lower than those of other common metals, at approximately one third that of steel. I ...
from its ore.
She was also a still-life painter, who exhibited at the Edgar Adams Gallery in Cleveland.
Early life and education
Julia was born on November 11, 1859, to Reverend Heman Bassett Hall (1823-1911) and his wife Sophronia Brooks Hall (1827-1885), missionaries in
Jamaica
Jamaica (; ) is an island country situated in the Caribbean Sea. Spanning in area, it is the third-largest island of the Greater Antilles and the Caribbean (after Cuba and Hispaniola). Jamaica lies about south of Cuba, and west of His ...
.
In 1860, the family returned to the United States. Julia's younger brother,
Charles Martin Hall
Charles Martin Hall (December 6, 1863 – December 27, 1914) was an American inventor, businessman, and chemist. He is best known for his invention in 1886 of an inexpensive method for producing aluminum, which became the first metal to atta ...
, was born in 1863 in
Thompson
Thompson may refer to:
People
* Thompson (surname)
* Thompson M. Scoon (1888–1953), New York politician
Places Australia
*Thompson Beach, South Australia, a locality
Bulgaria
* Thompson, Bulgaria, a village in Sofia Province
Canada
* ...
,
Geauga County, Ohio
Geauga County ( ) is a county in the U.S. state of Ohio. As of the 2020 census, the population was 95,397. The county seat is Chardon. The county is named for an Onondaga or Seneca language word meaning 'raccoon', originally the name of the ...
.
In 1873, the family moved to
Oberlin, Ohio
Oberlin is a city in Lorain County, Ohio, United States, 31 miles southwest of Cleveland. Oberlin is the home of Oberlin College, a liberal arts college and music conservatory with approximately 3,000 students.
The town is the birthplace of th ...
, where Heman Hall and Sophronia Brooks had attended Oberlin College.
Julia was one of eight children. With the exception of a brother (Lewis Albert) who died young,
all obtained degrees from
Oberlin College.
Her eldest brother, George Edward Hall (February 23, 1851, Jamaica - August 29, 1921, Pasadena, CA) became a minister.
Her older sister Ellen Julia Hall-Kinsey (Mrs. George M. Kinsey, 1852 - May 17, 1882) studied medicine at the
University of Wooster (she was a senior in the class of 1881)
and in
Vienna, Austria
en, Viennese
, iso_code = AT-9
, registration_plate = W
, postal_code_type = Postal code
, postal_code =
, timezone = CET
, utc_offset = +1
, timezone_DST ...
.
Her sister Emily Brooks Hall and Emily's husband Martin Luther Stimson (1857 - 1943) became
missionaries in China.
Julia Brainerd Hall is listed as a student in the Conservatory of Music at Oberlin College in the 1876–77 and 1877-78 catalogues.
She is listed as a second year student in the "Literary" course at Oberlin as of 1878,
and graduated in the Literary course in 1881.
The "Literary" course had replaced the "Ladies" course as of July 30, 1875.
Such educational tracking was usual for women attending Oberlin at the time.
One of the classes she took was chemistry, which was taught by William Kedzie in 1879-1880 for only one term prior to his unexpected death, rather than the usual two terms.
Some time before her invalid mother's death in 1885, Julia took over running the household and raising her two younger sisters, Edith May Hall (later Mrs. George H. Seymour, 1865-1937) and Louie Alice Hall (1870 - 1944).
Aluminum
Julia's brother Charles also attended Oberlin, matriculating in 1880 and graduating in 1885.
Upon entering college, he approached the new professor of chemistry, Frank Fanning Jewett, to purchase some laboratory equipment.
Charles Hall attended Jewett's chemistry course during his junior year, 1883-1884,
and conducted research in Jewett's laboratory.
Long before he graduated, Charles had set up a laboratory in a woodshed attached to the family home at 64 East College Street in Oberlin, Ohio.
There he researched the production of aluminum by electrolysis, ultimately obtaining a family of patents on April 2, 1889.
Charles was successful in a breakthrough experiment of dissolving alumina in molten cryolite at 1000 °C on February 9, 1886, demonstrating the process for his sisters and his father the next day after Julia returned from a visit to Cleveland.
After further experiments and the addition of aluminum fluoride, Hall was successful in preparing aluminum metal by electrolysis. On February 23, 1886, breaking open a clay crucible lined with graphite,
he found silvery aluminum pellets inside. Charles Hall took the metal to Frank Jewett for confirmation of the discovery.
Whether Charles Martin Hall or French chemist
Paul Héroult
Paul (Louis-Toussaint) Héroult (10 April 1863 – 9 May 1914) was a French scientist. He was the inventor of the aluminium electrolysis and developed the first successful commercial electric arc furnace. He lived in Thury-Harcourt, Normandy. ...
should be awarded U.S. patent rights was the subject of an important
Interference proceeding
An interference proceeding, also known as a priority contest, is an inter partes proceeding to determine the priority issues of multiple patent applications. It is a proceeding unique to the patent law of the United States. Unlike in most other cou ...
, decided on October 24, 1887.
[Charles M. Hall v. Paul L. .Héroult. Interference. Process for Reducing Aluminum by Electrolysis. U.S. Patent Office, October 24, 1887.] While Héroult had filed his U.S. patent application a few months earlier than Hall, the patent examiner concluded that Hall had discovered the process before Héroult applied for the patent in April 1886. The witnesses for Hall were Charles Hall, Heman Hall, Frank Jewett, another professor, and Julia. Julia testified before the patent examiner that her brother had demonstrated the process successfully in front of her. She had also prepared an account of the ''History of C. M. Hall's aluminum invention''
"relying on my memory alone",
which was not included in the official U S. record of the patent interference proceedings.
Two postmarked letters from Charles Hall to his brother George that described the invention in detail were included as important evidence establishing the timing of Hall's discovery.
The extent to which Julia Brainerd Hall was involved day-to-day in her brother's research and the discovery of the Hall process has been disputed. Her obituary in the ''Oberlin News'', September 30, 1926, stated that "She was a sister of Charles M. Hall and the one who gave him help and encouragement in his work on aluminum."
Early accounts by Alcoa company employees, Charles Carr's ''An American Enterprise'' (1952) and Junius Edwards' ''The Immortal Woodshed'' (1955) portray her as involved in Hall's home laboratory. However, they have been described as "celebratory" and lacking objectivity,
and criticized for lacking footnotes and bibliographic information.
Martha Trescott draws on these accounts when she makes a case for Julia's close involvement in Charles' laboratory. She argues that the written account that Julia Hall prepared for the patent examiner, and her annotations of Charles Hall's papers, are evidence of her close involvement in the scientific work.
Subsequent authors have relied on her accounts.
More recently, Norman Craig has examined the Oberlin archive's papers and draws different conclusions. He notes that Julia Hall's annotations of the family letters involve replacement of names with initials, and removal of information about the family's financial circumstances, rather than the removal of technical information. Based on the handwriting and references to Charles, he concludes that the annotations were likely made after Charles' death in December 1914. They suggest a review of the papers with a view to publication of a biography. Craig also notes that Charles wrote to various family members about his work, not just Julia, and that he demonstrated his results to his father and younger sisters as well as to Julia. Craig presents the image of a supportive, close-knit, intelligent family, interested in each other's work, rather than a brother-sister research and development team.
Development of the Hall process and its scaling up for industrial use continued over several years, but eventually the Hall process brought the cost of aluminum down from $12.00 per pound to $.30 per pound.
Later life
In 1901, Charles Hall had a house built for his sisters, Julia, Louie and Edith, at 280 Elm St. in Oberlin, known as the "Hall Sisters House".
The original family home on East College Street is now "Hall House", property of Oberlin College.
Charles died in 1914.
Julia Brainerd Hall moved to Rochester, New York as of 1917.
She died on Saturday, September 4, 1926, at the home that she shared with her sister, Louie Alice Hall, at 1422 Highland Avenue,
Rochester, New York
Rochester () is a city in the U.S. state of New York, the seat of Monroe County, and the fourth-most populous in the state after New York City, Buffalo, and Yonkers, with a population of 211,328 at the 2020 United States census. Located in W ...
. She was buried in
Mount Hope Cemetery in Rochester, New York.
[
]
References
External links
Charles Martin Hall Collection, 1882-1985
Oberlin College Archives
{{DEFAULTSORT:Hall, Julia Brainerd
1859 births
1926 deaths
American women chemists
20th-century chemists