
By 1933, Lise Meitner was a respected scientist in Germany and abroad, but her life changed dramatically for the worse when Adolf Hitler became Chancellor of Germany. Despite the fact that other Jewish friends and relatives working in Germany in the sciences had either been asked to leave or had resigned on their own, Lise continued her work at the KWI. It wasn’t until 1938 that she fled, aided by Dutch physicists Dirk Coster and Adriaan Fokker, and ended up in The Netherlands. Otto Hahn gave her a diamond ring he had inherited from his mother, and it was the only thing — aside from 10 German marks — that Meitner took with her on her journey.
After fleeing, she was offered a position in the laboratory of Manne Siegbahn. She continued corresponding with scientists in Germany, and on occasion, she met with them secretly to discuss scientific ideas. It was during this time that the discovery of nuclear fission became known. Because Hahn and a third colleague were worried about jeapordizing their reputations (the year was 1938), they did not include Lise Meitner on reports of their findings at the time. However, her discovery that the formulas they worked on could create a bomb persuaded her to come out of hiding long enough to seek the counsel of Alfred Einstein, whom she convinced to write to American President Franklin Roosevelt. Meitner was then offered employment in the US for the Manhattan Project at Los Alamos, but she turned it down, as she had no interest in building bombs.
In 1947, after working for The Nobel Institute for Physics and the Swedish Defense Research Establishment, Lise Meitner was awarded a position (which was created especially for her) at the University College of Stokholm in Sweden. Her funding came directly from The Council for Atomic Research. After the end of WW2, Meitner’s accomplishments became more widely known, and she was awarded several prizes, including the Max Planck Medal, the Enrico Fermi Award, and a National Press Club Award.
Meitner spent the remainder of her years in Stockholm, and passed away in 1968.















