Eugenie Clark received a Bachelor of Arts in zoology from
Hunter College (1942). During summers, she studied at the
University of Michigan Biological Station, and prior to graduate school, she worked for
Celanese Corporation as a chemist. Eugenie initially sought to attend graduate school at Columbia University, but her application was rejected out of fear that she would eventually choose to leave her scientific career in order to focus on raising children. Undaunted, Clark went on to earn both a Master of Arts (1946) and Doctorate of Zoology (1950) from
New York University. During her years of graduate study, Clark carried out research at the
Scripps Institution of Oceanography in La Jolla, the
American Museum of Natural History in New York, the
Woods Hole Marine Biological Laboratory in Massachusetts, and at the
Lerner Marine Laboratory in Bimini. In 1949, under an
Office of Naval Research program to undertake scientific research in
Micronesia, Clark carried out fish population studies in
Guam, the
Marshall Islands, the
Palau islands, the
Northern Mariana Islands, and the
Caroline Islands. After completing doctoral research, Clark received a
Fulbright Scholarship to pursue ichthyological studies at the Marine Biological Station in Hurghada, on the northern Red Sea Coast of Egypt. These experiences were discussed in Clark's first book,
Lady with a Spear (1953), the writing of which was supported in part by a Eugenie Saxton Memorial Fellowship and a Breadloaf Writers' Fellowship. The book was a popular success.
Anne and William H. Vanderbilt, fans of
Lady with a Spear who owned an estate in southwestern Florida, invited the biologist to speak at a public school in
Englewood, Florida, in 1954.
Work at Cape Haze At the Cape Haze Marine Laboratory, Clark worked with a local fisherman named Beryl Chadwick, who was experienced in catching sharks. Chadwick was Clark's only assistant at the time of the lab's founding. The lab's first request for shark research came from John H. Hellen, director of the New England Institute for Medical Research. As the laboratory's activities began to be published in scientific journals, requests from other researchers began to pour into the lab. Researchers from around the world came to study in Cape Haze. One of the visiting researchers at Cape Haze Laboratory was
Sylvia Earle, who was then working on her dissertation research on algae at
Duke University. Earle assisted Clark in creating a
herbarium by depositing duplicate specimens into the laboratory's reference collection. Clark was an active researcher and diver throughout her entire life, conducting her last dive in 2014 and publishing its results in January 2015, with additional research still undergoing review at the time of her death. == Personal life ==