Françoise Aron Ulam

Françoise Aron Ulam
Born 1918
Paris, France
Died April 30, 2011 (aged 92–93)
Santa Fe, New Mexico
Occupation Writer

Françoise Aron Ulam was the wife of Polish-American mathematician, Stanislaw Ulam. Born in 1918, in Paris, France. In 1939, she came to the United States as an exchange student. She studied at Mills College and Mount Holyoke College, earning a Master's degree in Comparative Literature.

In 1941 she met Stanislaw. In 1943, the Ulams moved from Los Alamos to Santa Fe following Stanislaw's involvement in the Manhattan Project in Los Alamos at its inception.

In Los Alamos, Francoise became part of the international community of scientists and mathematicians during the Atomic Age. Like many of the Manhattan Project wives, initially she knew very little about the purpose of the "Gadget," as the bomb was known at the time. She devoted herself to creating a home and raising a baby in the American Southwest. While she was quintessentially French, Françoise took naturally to the relaxed individualism that Santa Fe inspires, developing a taste for computers, yoga and feldenkrais.

In 1984, when her husband died, Françoise arranged for Santa Fe Institute to receive Stanislaw Ulam's library.

On April 30, 2011, Françoise died at El Castillo, aged 93. Françoise was buried in Paris.[1][2]

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