Rebecca Lancefield (born January 5, 1895, Fort Wadsworth, New York, U.S.—died March 3, 1981, Douglaston, Queens, New York) was an American bacteriologist who created a system of classification of the more than 60 different types of Group A streptococcal bacteria while conducting research at Rockefeller Institute (later Rockefeller University).
Lancefield graduated from Wellesley College and in 1918 became a technical assistant at Rockefeller Institute. In 1925 she obtained a Ph.D. in immunology and bacteriology at Columbia University. She spent most of her career (1918–80) at Rockefeller University. Her studies were vital in proving that one type of streptococcal bacterium could cause a number of diseases, including scarlet fever, erysipelas, or a sore throat; physicians previously had believed that each type of clinical invention was caused by a specific type of streptococcal bacterium. Lancefield’s research also led to a more efficacious treatment of streptococcal infections related to such conditions as scarlet fever, rheumatic fever, and Bright disease (glomerulonephritis), an acute inflammation of the kidneys. Lancefield was also the first woman to be elected president of the American Association of Immunologists (1961–62).