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Groundbreaking B.C. chemist Edith Rose still working for your health at 102

Canada’s first female cereal chemist still volunteering at Cranbrook’s East Kootenay Regional Hospital
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At right: Edith Rose (front, centre) was joined at the East Kootenay Regional Hospital by members of the Cranbrook Health Care Auxiliary. Left to right: Evelyn Botterill, Janice Gauthier, Dianne Camilli, Kate Fox, Odette Rouse, Diane Greaves, Linda Foster. (Barry Coulter photo)

Edith Rose, who marked her 102nd birthday on Dec. 30, came down to work a shift on the Cranbrook Health Care Auxiliary Information Desk at the East Kootenay Regional Hospital on Monday, Jan. 8.

Rose grew up on a farm near Sovereign, Saskatchewan. She graduated with a BSc in Chemistry from the University of Saskatchewan in the 1940s, and became Canada’s first female cereal chemist.

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Barry Coulter

About the Author: Barry Coulter

Barry Coulter had been Editor of the Cranbrook Townsman since 1998, and has been part of all those dynamic changes the newspaper industry has gone through over the past 20 years.
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