After working as an associate professor and division chair at
Oklahoma Baptist University from 1979 to 1991, Ogilvie returned to the
University of Oklahoma as the Curator of the History of Science Collections. As curator, she expanded the holdings of the collection from 79,000 to 94,000 volumes. After her retirement in 2008, a fellowship for graduate studies in the History of Science was established in her name. She is currently Curator Emeritus, History of Science Collections, and Professor Emeritus, Department of the History of Science, at the university. This theme was taken up again in
Marie Curie: A Biography (2004; paperback edition 2011), in which Ogilvie discusses Marie Curie's partnership with her husband
Pierre Curie. She also describes their individual contributions to the discoveries for which they jointly received the 1903
Nobel Prize in Physics, and Marie received the 1911
Nobel Prize in Chemistry. Ogilvie's books are currently held by hundreds of libraries around the world. She was honored on the occasion of her 80th birthday at the Annual Meeting of the
History of Science Society in November 2016 as a "leading historian of women in science." According to her colleague
Pnina Abir-Am of the Women's Studies Research Center at
Brandeis University, Ogilvie, through her work on biographical dictionaries of women in science, was instrumental in drawing attention to the sheer number of women in scientific fields throughout history. == Personal life ==