Mead received a license to teach mathematics as a substitute in New York City schools, with her first assignment at
Evander Childs High School in the Bronx. By June 1915, she had joined AT&T's Western Union building on Broadway, hired by
George Ashley Campbell as a "
computer" to work on transmission probability problems. In 1923, Campbell credited Mead in a technical paper for her meticulous work on the exponential
Poisson distribution.
Transition to engineer In 1919, Pero transitioned from "computer" to "engineer" at AT&T D&R's Transmission Engineering unit under supervisor
John Renshaw Carson. Mead developed expertise in the mathematics of transmission through cables, wires, and conducting tubes, especially those with circular cross sections. In 1924, she applied for a patent on a "distortion compensator," becoming the first woman at AT&T to hold a patent upon its granting in 1929. Mead earned six patents throughout her career. She became the first woman to publish in the
Bell System Technical Journal and went on to author six
BSTJ articles. Along with
Sergei Schelkunoff, Mead rediscovered
Lord Rayleigh's findings on waveguide cutoff frequencies, and their work went on to extend Rayleigh's results to include metal attenuation losses. Southworth himself was unsure which of the two was first to describe the effect. The work of Mead and Shelkunoff on the attenuation of the
TE01 mode led to significant advancements in microwave communications. Mead retired in 1958, remarking that she looked forward to having more time study mathematics and Russian. == Personal life ==