Born at
Owego, New York, she graduated from
Vassar College in 1892, and in 1899 she received her doctorate in
philosophy from
Bryn Mawr College, with a thesis supervised by embryologist and geneticist
Thomas Hunt Morgan. She had majored in morphology. She remained at the College after graduation as a fellow and student assistant in biology from 1897 to 1904. King taught
physiology at Miss Baldwin's School,
Bryn Mawr, from 1899 to 1907, was research fellow at the
University of Pennsylvania in 1906–08, and served as an assistant in
anatomy in 1908–09. After 1909, she worked at the
Wistar Institute, for more than 40 years, first as an assistant and eventually becoming professor of embryology in 1927 and remaining there until her retirement in 1949. King served as vice president of the
American Society of Zoologists in 1937, and was associate editor of the
Journal of Morphology and Physiology from 1924 to 1927 and editor of the Wistar Institute's bibliography service from 1922 to 1935. King participated in breeding the
Wistar rat, a strain of genetically homogeneous albino
rats for use in biological and medical research. She died at age 85 on March 7, 1955, in
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. == Research ==