Gilbreths biography of alberta

          Readers of Cheaper by the Dozen remember Lillian Moller Gilbreth () as the working mom who endures the antics of not only twelve.

        1. Frank Gilbreth Jr. was born in Plainfield, N.J., and graduated from the University of Michigan in He worked as a reporter for The New York.
        2. Ernestine Gilbreth Carey, with a younger brother, wrote “Cheaper by the Dozen,” an account of growing up in a family of 12 children.
        3. His death occurred at his home in Barnwell, Alberta Canada, February 15, at the age of In his youth, June and his brother George had chosen farming.
        4. She continued to teach at the university until she retired in at the age of Labelled as “The World's Greatest Woman Engineer” in
        5. Ernestine Gilbreth Carey, with a younger brother, wrote “Cheaper by the Dozen,” an account of growing up in a family of 12 children..

          The Gilbreth Family

          Generation 2: The (Baker's) Dozen

          Anne Moller Gilbreth

          b.

          9 September 1905 – Manhattan, NYC
          d. 16 February 1987 – Palo Alto, California (81y 5m)
          e. Smith College (2 years); degree from University of Michigan 1926
          m. Robert Ethelbert Barney MD, 18 Sep 1926 – Montclair, New Jersey
          c.

          Robert Ethelbert Barney Jr, 1928; Frank Gilbreth Barney, 1930; Peter Charles Barney 1932
          i. unknown

          Anne was born in New York City on September 9, 1905.

          Heritage Columns feature biographical information on distinguished women in psychology's past and present.

          Her name seems to be a blend of the two family histories, with Anne from both Frank Sr's oldest sister and from Lillian's mother Annie Moller. Most of the children to follow would carry such an ancestral first and middle name combination.

          She first attended Smith College in central Massachusetts, then transferred to the University of Michigan, where she met her future husband.

          Although she had lost interest in college, where she had been involved in debate, drama and literary efforts, she felt obliged to the famil