Emily Ray Gregory (November 1, 1863 – 1946) was an American zoologist who is best known as holding the American Women's Table at the Naples Zoological Station and her work with the United States War Trade Board and the United States Treasury Department.
[1][2] After receiving her bachelor's degree in 1885, Gregory went to Philadelphia where she worked as a teacher in a variety of private girls' schools.
In order to save enough money to pay for education for her doctoral degree, she worked at Woods Hole during the summers from 1893 to 1895.
After completing her teaching career, she worked for the War Trade Board and the United States Treasury Department from 1919 to 1924 in Washington D.C., where she researched a variety of topics.
Some of her research topics encompassed the development of turtle excretory systems and the emergence of the pronephric duct in Selachians.