Nettie Lorene Murray MacGinitie (February 27, 1899 â June 16, 1993) was an American marine biologist and malacologist. She served as director of the Kerckhoff Marine Laboratory from 1957 to 1959, and with her husband, George MacGinitie, contributed to marine biology research, education, and public understanding of marine life through books and films.
Nettie Lorene Murray was born in Falls City, Polk County, Oregon, to Catherina Kurz and Lindley Byron Murray. She grew up on a homestead and later attended Oregon State College.
In the summer of 1925, during a session at the Hopkins Marine Station of Stanford University, she met George MacGinitie at a tidepool. The two married in 1927.
From 1932 to 1957, George MacGinitie directed the Kerckhoff Marine Laboratory in Corona del Mar, California, after which Nettie succeeded him as director from 1957 to 1959.
Together, the MacGinities participated in a U.S. Navy marine research program at Point Barrow, Alaska, where Nettie described numerous mollusk species collected during the expedition.
The MacGinities coauthored the book Natural History of Marine Animals, first published in 1949, which became a widely used reference in marine biology. In 1974, they wrote the childrenâÂÂs book The Wild World of George and Nettie MacGinitie.
Nettie also assisted in the production of several educational films about marine life, including Secrets of Life (1956), Mysteries of the Deep (1959), and the Walt Disney production of 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea (1954). Their research and outreach efforts influenced conservation work at Elkhorn Slough.
Nettie and George MacGinitie had one son, Walter Harold MacGinitie, who became a specialist in reading and literacy testing and co-developed the GatesâÂÂMacGinitie Reading Test.
Nettie MacGinitie died on June 16, 1993.