Details for Leah Moncure, P.E.

Historical Marker — Atlas Number 5000023247

Data

Marker Number 23247
Atlas Number 5000023247
Marker Title Leah Moncure, P.E.
Index Entry Moncure, Leah
Address 1601 Main St.
City Bastrop
County Bastrop
UTM Zone 14
UTM Easting 661848
UTM Northing 3332957
Subject Codes women's topics; engineering topics; transportation; educational topics; state government; health topics
Marker Year 2020
Recorded Texas Historic Landmark No
Marker Location NE corner Main and Cedar streets
Private Property No
Marker Condition In Situ
Marker Size 27" x 42"
Marker Text (June 7, 1904 - January 17, 1972) As the Texas Highway Department's first female engineer, Leah Moncure, P.E., broke barriers at a time when the engineering field was dominated by men. Leah was born in Bastrop to Cassius Lee (C.L.) Moncure, a Bastrop County Surveyor and a civil engineer, and Hattie Nuckols Moncure. The family moved into a house on Main Street in 1911. At an early age, Leah showed an interest in the surveying profession and became familiar with tools, materials and methods, often acting as a draftsman for her father. Early on, doctors predicted that Leah would not grow into adulthood as she was born with a congenital heart defect. However, Leah persevered. She graduated in 1925 from Baylor University with high honors and a double major in mathematics and education. As she looked for an engineering opportunity, she found her options limited. Moncure taught in Houston for a year before working for a consulting firm. Realizing that she needed a degree in civil engineering to pursue the career of her dreams, Leah enrolled at the University of Texas at Austin (UT Austin), School of Engineering and graduated in 1937. On April 22, 1938, Leah Moncure became Engineer No. 2250, the state's first woman to register as a professional engineer and the only licensed female for a number of years. Moncure also became the first female life member of the National Society of Professional Engineers. Moncure worked for the Texas Highway Department for 32 years, specializing in research, right-of-way, and road design in east Texas and Austin. Leah retired in 1964 and moved back to her childhood home on Main Street. In 1965, a scholarship for female engineering students at UT Austin was established in her name. Moncure died in 1972 and is buried in Bastrop's Fairview Cemetery. (2020)

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