User:Antiqueight/Engineers and related woman
Appearance
IET list referenced in the Woman Engineer
[edit]No guarantee these are engineers or notable. Just that they have a mention in the journal. Nor is this the complete list - that's several thousand long. It's just the start. (Other engineers :Wikipedia:WikiProject Women in Red/Missing articles by occupation/Engineers)
- role models for girls [[1]]
Professors
[edit](Complete with typos and spelling errors and people who are already on the wiki)
- Professor Angela Bowey
- Professor Doris Gray
- Professor Margaret Mackeith
- Professor Mavis Doyle
- Professor Mitsuko Kazuno
- Professor Valerie Karn
- Professor Andrea Schaefer
- Professor Angda Newing
- Professor Furong Li
- Professor Janet Bainbridge
- Professor Janet Hyde
- Professor Jenny Kitzinger
- Professor Julia Noble
- Professor Khedidja Allia
- Professor Letitia Cheng
- Professor Lynne Macaskie
- Professor Mahin Rahmani
- Professor Nina Thornhill
- Professor Susan Vinnicombe
- Professor Averil Macdonald
- Professor Lois Ventris
- Professor Maria Vajndal
General list begun
[edit]- Dora Whitehurst
- Beatrice Hilda
- Marie Lawson
- Eleanor Page
- Madge Piercy
- Edith Pollitt
- Mary Robinson (engineer)?
- Aili-Salli Ahde
- Sylvia Anthony
- Theodora Bosanquet
- Fraulein Bothfeldt
- Hannah Dixon
- Jane Faraday
- Ena Galus-Smith
- Anita Gronvik
- Julie Heyneman
- Margaret Horsey
- Signe Lagerborg-Stenius
- Ingeborg Lauren
- Laimi Leidenius
- Ruth Levi
- Vivi Lonn
- Linda Melander
- Charlotte Naish
- Greta Nygard
- Hanna Parviainen
- Joanna Pecanac
- Myfanwy Rees
- Vera Bragina
- Mistress Cutler
- Nora Hewett
- Margaret Hood
- Dora Ibberson
- Margaret Ingals
- Mlle Klein
- Marie Luhring
- Edith Picton-Tmbervill
- Elizabeth Richardson
- Gisela Urban
- Muriel Watson
- Ruth Young
- Sheila Barrett
- Margaret Cory
- Helen Graham
- Vera Irzun
- Helen Ostaeevich
- Ester Pecsi
- Elizabeth Scott
- Dorothy Vicaji
- Nadya Zaitseva
- Klava Zhiltsova
- E. I. Burow
- Antonina Alexandrova
- Ethelen Chukhnyuk
- Olga Hillova
- Gertrude Selcaninova
- Catherine Seregina
- Maria Steding
- Evdolcia Uralova
- Carmen Venegas
- Gertrude Williams
- Natalia Yearmenko
- Rena Zafiriov
- Anna Zharkova
- Catherine Eiden
- Evelyn Jetter
- Ethel Levene
- Mary Murphy
- Hannah Shilling
- Virginia Sink
- Jesus De
- Sue Burgess
- Olive Mayer
- Kilmuir Viscountess
- Mlle. Barbe
- Zinaida Fyodorova
- E. Constance
- Louisa Pigon
- Daphne Sidebottom
- Shirley Thomas
- Ludmila Balahovskaya
- Caroline Barclay
- Anthea Bendall
- Gwendoline Bidgood
- Ada Bursi
- Jacqueline Buzzard
- Decia Carreira
- May Davidson
- Louise Davis
- Mary Dingley
- Elizabeth Franklin
- Laura Grindrod
- Saima Kanulainen
- Marion Lyall
- Sophia Machado
- Mattie McFadden
- Heloisa Medeiros
- Gail Midgley
- Valentina Rogova
- Adele Scribani
- Jeanne Spiegel
- Pat Stacey
- Phyllis Thomson
- Louise Wood
- Sheridan Alderson
- Barbara Boroclzik
- Meg Budd
- Hermie Clokie
- Maria Czerniewska
- Camila David
- Latife Gurer
- Barbara Hardie
- Penelope Horsburgh
- Pat Howe
- Alice Lechina
- Doris McNulty
- Golder Meyer
- Sarah Millar
- Emily Nowell
- Gill Olsen
- Ebun Prof
- Bilge Ozguner
- Sally Ramsden
- Hande Suber
- Henryka Waleska
- Al-Lami Mohammed
- Maria Baczak
- Kamala Balaranan
- Debbie Bartram
- Helen Bavister
- Connie Christensen
- Susan Cresswell
- Antoinette David
- Carolyn Faulder
- Hugette Francois
- Helen Franks
- Isabel Margaret
- Jacqueline Gastinne
- Kathleen Harer
- Clare Harrison
- Julie Hobson
- Fenella Hume
- Katherine Jones
- Margery Melissa
- Mary Malotke
- Bridget McEwan
- Jackie Paling
- Jyoti Parikh
- Linda Rodriguez
- Anna Saengbangpla
- Audrey Douglas
- Alison Sutton
- Ann Synge
- Kathleen Westhorpe
- Anne Wicks
- Charmaine Wisniewski
- Judith Zwartz
- Martha Achy-Brau
- Anne-Marie Almond
- Lee Angel
- Gillian Archer
- Maureen Aronson
- Jane Atherton
- Lynne Atkinson
- Andrea Bailey
- Michelle Bain
- Lsobel Banks
- Jill Barnes
- Claire Barton
- Myrtle Bennan
- Felicity Benwood
- Judith Blackledge
- Jenny Bladon
- Denise Bland
- Joan Bloomfield
- Janet Bohdanowicz
- Elsie Boulding
- Annette Brown
- Anita Bruce
- Lisa Bruff
- Cynthia Burgess
- Kathryn Cameron
- Anne Carding
- Julia Carter
- Doris Chapman
- Pamela Conquer
- Ruth Cooper
- Ruth Cowley
- June Crabtree
- Mary Cumming
- Valerie Curtis
- Mona Dahms
- Sarah Daniells
- Julia Dick
- Julie Eardley
- Annie Eastwood
- Karen Eccles
- Patricia Ernsting
- Carolyn Evans
- Heather Fangman
- Jane Finlay
- Karen Fletcher
- Lucy Frederick
- Joanne Gambell
- Anna Garry
- Sarah Gomm
- Tina Gould
- Pauline Graham
- Fiona Greenwood
- Karen Gregson
- Carol Grogan
- Emma Guest
- Marilyn Hackerby
- Caroline Haigh
- Diana Harrison
- Nicola Harrison
- Frances Hatton
- Carolyn Heafield
- Emma Hellawell
- Jan Hennessy
- Helen Holden
- Ruth Homes-DowningMrs
- Catherine Hood
- Cindy Ingalls
- Sian Jenkins
- Su Johnson
- Celia Jones
- Jaqueline Lane
- Sophia Langley
- Elaine Lawrence
- Veronique Ledoux
- Barbara Macdermott
- Janet Macdonald
- Katrina Magee
- Tessa Malcolm-Brown
- Judith Mallaby
- Beverley Manning
- Helena Massie
- Shiela McClaren
- Viv McKenna
- Diana McMahon
- Julie Meakin
- Zohra Merabet
- Pearl Meyer
- Sue Millward
- Glenis Moore
- Sally Mortimore
- Pam Morton
- Susan Murray
- Tracey Murray
- Venetia Myhill
- Elizabeth Naylor
- Sheila Needham
- Michelle Oberman
- Susan Onwural
- Lene Orchard
- Andrea Parkhouse
- Ann Pentelow
- Joan Perkin
- Liz Pettit
- Bernadette Phillips
- Deborah Pinnick
- Fiona Price
- Clare Rain
- P. Ramsden-WilliamsMrs
- Karima Ratanski
- Helen Richardson
- Ceridwen Roberts
- Hazel Robinson
- Kirsty Ross
- Sheila Rothwell
- Karen Rowland
- Rachael Shattock
- Marilyn Shaw
- Paula Shirreff
- Elaine Sinclair
- Julia Sloman
- Barbara Smail
- Sandy Stash
- Paula Talpaert
- Alison Tayor
- Liz Tebbit
- Elizabeth Tebbitt
- Denise Tomlinson
- Carole Truman
- Fiona Turnbull
- Beverley Warburton
- Sylvia Wasserman
- Liz Welles
- Sarah Weston
- Penny Whitehead
- Ann Wickham
- Hazel Wilkinson
- Pat Wilsher
- Anne Wilson
- Danuta Wisniewski
- Jayne Wood
- D'souza Marian
- Carrie Zetter
- Christine Zmroczek
- Sally Abraham
- Lynne Aitken
- Pamela Alderson
- Hengameh Ale-Mohammad
- Morag Armstrong
- Elizabeth Ashbee
- Linda Ashton
- Kirsten Atkinson
- Anne-Marie Baillie
- Anne Baker
- Nicole Ballantyne
- Nichola Balmer
- Seear Baroness
- Young Baroness
- Kate Barron
- Samantha Barter
- Virginia Baynes
- Carol Bedwell
- Carol Beech
- Annette Bell
- Catherine Bell
- Elizabeth Bennett
- Carol Bernstein
- Donna Bethell
- Christiane Bielefeld
- Kate Binder
- Katherine Birch
- Alyson Birkett
- Jane Blunt
- Jennifer Bonsell
- Marion Borman
- Lynne Bower
- Patricia Brace-Gough
- Catherine Bradley
- Hilary Briggs
- Elizabeth Bright
- Hilda Brown
- Valerie Budd
- Valerie Burgin
- Aileen Burrows
- Gillian Burrows
- Joanna Cambridge
- Anne-Marie Carter
- Catherine Carter
- Sally Cassels
- Maria Castles
- Gek Chandler
- Sally-Anne Chapman
- Janet Charlton
- Debra Charnley
- Nicholae Chima
- Catherine Chisnall
- Kathryn Clapp
- Alex Clark
- Karen Clarke
- Trica Clarke-Jervoise
- Lin Collins
- Sally-Jane Coode
- Catherine Cook
- Kate Corfield
- Vickie Cox
- Angela Coyle
- Mary Craig
- Josephine Crawshaw
- Sarah Crick
- Valerie Crispin
- Jennifer Cristock
- Mindy Cutcher
- Julia Dain
- Jane Davey
- Catherine Davies
- Elaine Davies
- Irene Davies
- Louise Davies
- Andrea Davis
- Suman Dharni
- Helen Diamontides
- Lynne Dickinson
- Katherine Diver
- Jane Dobson
- Gillian Doel
- Carrie Dominguez
- Kristina Dudley
- Amanda Eden
- Susan Edward
- Elaine Eichner
- Julie Ellam
- Lynn Elvey
- Margaret Emsley
- Hilary England
- Patricia Evans
- Pennie Evans
- Rebecca Evans
- Nicola Faragher
- Valerie Fawcett
- Stephanie Fee
- Lesley Fellowes
- Ann Fleck
- Vanessa Fletcher
- Denise Flier
- Jo Foord
- Rosemary Forrest
- Kathryn Freeburn
- Charlotte Fryett
- Julie Garland
- Anne Gibson
- Penelope Glover
- Elizabeth Goodwin
- Meriel Gore
- Emma Gough
- Fiona Gover
- Noeleen Grant
- Yota Green
- Sheila Griffiths
- Durdana Habib
- Patricia Haddock
- Catherine Haile
- Deborah Hall
- Gill Hamilton
- Stephanie Hamilton
- Sharon Hancock
- Irene Hannah
- Anne Hannan
- Deborah Harlett
- Liz Harman
- Elizabeth Harris
- Gillian Harvey
- Catherine Hastings
- Marion Hawkins
- Sally Hayward
- Sue Hazell
- Dorothy Hearnden
- Alison Heath
- Julie Hicks
- Bridget Hillier
- Deborah Hills
- Tonya Hills
- Catherine Hobson
- Bridget Hocken
- Lyn Hoffman
- Wendy Hopkinson
- Mel Horton
- Caroline Hosker
- Karen Houghton
- Norma Huddy
- Sandra Hudson
- Helen Igoe
- Karen Inglis
- Abigail Jackson
- Francis Jackson
- Shirley James
- Shahla Jamshidi
- Jenny Jerrams-Smith
- Selby Joseph
- Deborah Joyce
Women mentioned on WES volumes
[edit]1920s
[edit]Name | Year | Notes |
---|---|---|
MARY Abbott | 1920 | Author of " Women and the Conquest of the Air" |
Allport | 1920 | Elected at 1st WES AGM to WES committee |
Bailey | 1920 | |
Ida E. Bray | 1920 | I/c Aerial bomb section, Inspection department, Woolwich arsenal. Pupil of Mr Caulfield |
Fruen | 1920 | Elected at 1st WES AGM to WES committee |
HETTY G. GROUSE | 1920 | |
Mademoiselle Hervieu | 1920 | One wom·an there is who has actually been a carrier of mails between Paris and Brussels. She, is also now teaching flyin g in another continent, but it is to America, not Australia, that she has gone. |
Mary Hickin | 1920 | Elected at 1st WES AGM to WES committee |
FRANCES M. HODGSON | 1920 | |
Hudson | 1920 | Elected at 1st WES AGM to WES committee, M.A |
Lady Norman | 1920 | Elected at 1st WES AGM to WES committee |
Edna J. Linford | 1920 | Loughborough Tech Coll |
Linford | 1920 | Elected at 1st WES AGM to WES committee |
Mewhort | 1920 | Edinburgh trades council, Revd Grace Mewhort worked with the poor of Edinburgh and allied with the women's suffrage and trade unions |
Ornsby | 1920 | Elected at 1st WES AGM to WES committee |
Lady Eustace Percy | 1920 | Stella Katherine Percy Drummand. Elected at 1st WES AGM to WES committee |
M. D. Rowbotham | 1920 | Elected at 1st WES AGM to WES committee/ of the Swainson Pump Co./ has now joined the firm of M. artridge & Company, and is assisting Miss Partridge in connection with the lighting of South Molton , Devon |
Mary Selby | 1920 | Elected at 1st WES AGM to WES committee as Hon. Secretary |
Gladys Thornycroft | 1920 | Elected at 1st WES AGM to WES committee |
DORA WHITEHURST | 1920 | |
Laura A. Willson | 1920 | Elected at 1st WES AGM to WES committee, M.B. E. |
W. G . Anderson | 1921 | The value of her splendid work for the prevention of sweated trades before the Select Committee on Home Work, 19.07, can hardly be gauged, while the story of the Cradley Heath Chain Makers has passed into industrial history. The \ i\Tages Board and Trade Boards owe their advent mainly to her energy, and her work dnring the war and later as head of the Central Committee on Women's Employment is too well known to need recapitulation. No great character will be free from criticism, but it is preferable to dwell on the courage and vision which, for the good of humanity, lit the torch of love and progress and kindled it with a fresh flame of hope and enthusiasm. Miss Macarthur's example should be an inspiration to all. |
Kathleen E. Bingham | 1921 | B.Sc. |
Mademoiselle Bourguignon | 1921 | who came out second in the examination of the at Ecole Superieure d'Electricite. She is to-day the first woman to hold the post of Chef de Traveaux, adjoint, and is in charge of the college apparatus, Her future career is one that should be of very great interest to observe. |
Dorothy Y. Bridge | 1921 | |
ELSIE E. ELMITT | 1921 | |
Maria Fernando | 1921 | who owns an iron mine in Pulacan province north of Manila, and devotes her whole time to mining ~nd the manufacture of agricultural implemen ts. |
Hilda E. Fry | 1921 | Mrs. Hanson |
Mary Gwynne-Howell | 1921 | |
Maynard Holmes | 1921 | of the Hendon Jig and Tool Co., |
W. P. Johnson | 1921 | |
JOAN MAYNARD | 1921 | |
Mademoiselle Moitessier | 1921 | the first woman student to graduate from the Institut Electrotecbnique de Grenoble. |
Madeleine Nott (later Mansley) | 1921 | AMCT |
D Pennington | 1921 | was -unti l recent ly on t he S taff of the Metropolitan- Vickers E lec trical Co |
Smith | 1921 | STE |
Turner | 1921 | Atalanta ltd |
H. Yates | 1921 | of Girton also obtained a pass in the Mechanical Science Tripos. |
Jane Burr | 1922 | |
FOXWELL | 1922 | of Girton College, Cambridge, has been successful in securing a first-class in the Mechanical Science Tripos. |
H. B. IRVING | 1922 | aeronautics |
Ms Janson | 1922 | |
EDITH A. Linford | 1922 | |
E. A. Little | 1922 | of Girton College, obtained a third class in the Mechanical Science Tripos |
Miss Munro | 1922 | |
Pinder | 1922 | late of the Galloway Engineering Co. |
Philippa SENLAC | 1922 | |
A.N. Tite | 1922 | One of two of the first women engineering students at Loughborough College, have come down this term. Both have been awarded the College Diploma. |
CARLIA S. Westcott | 1922 | The FIRST .AMERICAN \iVOMAN MARINE ENGINEER. American Woman's Success.-According to the New Yorl<- Times of December 4th, 1921, · Mrs. Carlia S. Vves tcott, of Washington, bas just been granted a licence as Marine Engineer. Mrs. \i\Testcott has the distin ction of being the firs t woman to be granted a licence to work as a mari ne engineer in America. She · is seen in the pictu re on the outside cover of this issue engaged in packi.ng the stuffing box of a valve in a steam feed pipe on a sea-going tug. Mrs. Westcott is of opinion that" Women are peculiarly fitted for gas and steam engineering as the work is light and the principal requiremen t is close attention to duty." |
E. F. Bull | 1923 | who was for sometime at Tongland, is now studying for her B .Sc. in Applied Science (Metallurgy) at Glasgow Technical College and has recently been successful in passing her Finals in Engineering (Heat Engines), Engineering Drawing and Geology….........................Also in GIasgow Miss Bull, BS c. (now Mrs . Dunlop) assisted her father at Bull's Metal and Metalloid Co ., where ships' propellors are made. Bulls Metal and Melloid Co February 1901. January 1902. 1912. 1912. 1918. 1926. 1926. 1943. of Yoker, Glasgow, makers of propellor and other castings from bronze, Bull's metal, melloid and other malleable bronze alloys, 1891 Bull's metal was in use at this date at the Royal Small Arms Factory in Montgomery St, Birmingham advertised Bull's metal swarf and other metals for sale by tender[1] 1898 Whilst working for Phosphor Bronze Co Ltd, Mr Bull had been granted patents on Bull's metal; he left the company after making an agreement with them to buy from them the benefit of all orders relating to Bull's metal and melloid. Mr Bull sold the patents to Bulls Metal and Melloid Co who challenged (in 1899) Phosphor Bronze Co about infringing the agreement[2]. 1901 A hearing of the legal action brought by Phosphor Bronze Co Ltd against Bulls Metal and Melloid Co, in which it was decided that the agreement regarding melloid meant that this was pure copper which had been hot rolled; it was decided that Phosphor Bronze Co must have been using cold rolling and therefore did not infringe the agreement; decision in favour of the plaintiffs[3]. 1908 Proponent of solid metal propellors[4]. 1937 Brass and bronze founders and rollers. "Bull's" White Metals. "Melloid" Bronze for Castings and Tubes. [5] 1952 Orders for sidelights and windows for 5 ships to be made in Belgium[6]. 1957 Possibly had by this time changed name to Bull's Metal and Marine, makers of propellors and ship windows, which was owned by J. Stone and Co (Holdings) Ltd. 1958 Bull's Metal and Marine, makers of propellors (some in Novoston) and ship windows, was owned by J. Stone and Co (Holdings) Ltd[7]. Htter father was p://www.gracesguide.co.uk/images/f/fa/Im1926EYB-Bulls.jpg H John C. Bull (c1861-1912) of Bull's Metal and Melloid Co |
MARJORIE E. Cohen | 1923 | |
David Davis | 1923 | Lady Mayoress of Birmingham |
Caroline Maud Davis | 1923 | , who has for some time assisted with her father's foundry at Wednesbury, has now joined Miss C. Griff at Birmingham, ·with ~view to enlarging the scope of the Stainless and Non-Corrosive Metal Co. Lived with Dorothy Margaret Davis (sister?) and Mrs Caroline Anne Davis (sister in law?) at 'Ruxidie', Hartopp road, Sutton Coldfield, Birmingham and all three were directors of the company. |
B. Duller | 1923 | |
Kerr | 1923 | the Industrial Welfare Society |
LILITH M. LAMBDEN | 1923 | |
MADAME LAURENT | 1923 | Principal of Ecole d 'Enseignemen t Technique Feminin. |
Isabel Hamilton Sloan | 1923 | representing the Ministry of Labour |
Pearl Swan | 1923 | the only woman Engineer ing Student at Liverpool University, has recently gained a First Class in the Examination for the Degree of Bachelor of Engineering with Honours in Electrical Engineering (University of Liverpool), and has been accepted as a College Apprentice at the 'works of the Metropolitan-Vi ckers Co., Ltd. |
F. I. Taylor | 1923 | H.M. Deputy Superintending Inspector of Factories |
Thomas | 1923 | London Electric Railway Co. |
E. M. Bolton | 1924 | |
H. M. Davis | 1924 | |
M . Dickinson | 1924 | a member who has been for some time engaged in very valuable work in connec tion with a scientific -process for de-scaling boilers, |
Enfield | 1924 | |
Eva Holt | 1924 | |
Agnes M. Jackman | 1924 | LADY MAYORESS of MANCHESTER |
Norah M. Jeans | 1924 | , who is working as technical assistant and draughtswoman to a consulting engineer engaged on experimental work in con– nection with the I nfinit ely Variable Gear, h as recently been successful in obtaining a First– Class Pass with distinction in Mathematics and Mechanical Drawing, and also a First-Class Pass in Workshop Practice and Processes, at the Regent Street Polytechnic, London, where she has been a student in the Evening Class Section . We understand that the Regent Street Polytechnic is now willing to admit women students into its workshops, which had hitherto been closed to them. |
T. Llewelyn | 1924 | Davies (Inner Temple), who was one of the first women called to the Bar in England, has kindly consented to act as Honorary Legal Adviser to the W.E.S. |
MARY MacDonald | 1924 | |
Miss Macleod | 1924 | |
Florence M. Poley | 1924 | is another American woman engineer, who has recently become a member of , the W .E.S. She is a civil engineer on the staff of the Nickel Plate Railroad, where her duties chiefly consist of designing anti esti– mating in connection with the work of her Company. Miss Poley is apparently expecten to deal with any problE:m that comes into the office ; this work is of a very varied nature, as she is ~ometimes engaged on designing and estimating for a " signal tower,'.' a railway crossing,. or even a railway yard ! M;ost of the buildings which her firm erect are of fire-proof construction, either of steel, brick oi concrete. ·' ·· - · Miss Poley has the distinction of being the first woman -member of the American Association of Engineers, and has had a very interesting career. On l!=aving college she entereq a large lumber business, with a view to learning all she could about that particular trade, after which she took ·a position as draughtswoman in an architect's office, and finally joined ·her present firm, where she has been for the last seven s. |
Miss Routledge | 1924 | |
Miss Talbot | 1924 | Girl Guides |
Mary Waugh | 1924 | married |
P. Whitley | 1924 | |
Archdale | 1925 | |
Ashcroft | 1925 | |
Margaret BENSON | 1925 | |
G. Burlton | 1925 | |
Chilton | 1925 | |
MILLICENT DAME FAWCETT | 1925 | |
Dillon | 1925 | B .Sc., Physics l\Iistress, Domestic Science Dept ., Kings College for Women, |
Zoe Fairfield | 1925 | |
Councillor Gregory | 1925 | one of the founder members of the Womens elctrical Association, has been elected a member of the E lectricity Com– mittee of the Corporation of West Ham |
Janet M Harris | 1925 | Yvho is still at the Londo11 University, has recently been elected a student member of the Institution of Civil Engineers. One of the first female engineering graduates from London university. Worked at Kennedy Donkin firm in London on reinforced concrete work. (The Montreal Gazette - Apr 20, 1936). , who worked for some time under Professor Coker at London Univer– sity, has now secured an interesting position with Messrs. Kennedy & Donkin, the well-known con ulting engineers. Miss J. M. Harris, M.Sc., has lately joined t he con crete section of the Engineers' Department of the London, Midland and Scottish Railway staff. She is engaged on t he design of works in reinforced concrete and her first job in this connection was on the fr amework for small station buildings. This promises to be an interesting outlet and we both congratul ate Miss Harris and wish her success. |
VICTORIA HAZLITT | 1925 | |
Hoster | 1925 | |
Miss Howie | 1925 | |
E. M. , Keary | 1925 | , of the National Physical L abora tory, Teddington, has an interest1n~ .article in the May issue of the " Shipbuilder," entitl ed " The Steering of Ships." This a;rticle contains some very interesting .infonnation and is profusely illustrated with excellent diagrams. The research described in the article is the result o{ work done at the \Villiam Froud tank at Teclclington. |
R . F . Kennedy | 1925 | WES scotland |
C. U. KERR | 1925 | |
T . A. Kingham | 1925 | |
Lady Belhaven and Stenton | 1925 | . Towards the end of November an organising Campaign \\·as undertaken in Scotland. For a long- t ime past it h as been apparen t that Glasgow was r ipe for such a movement and , arising out of invitations from th e G lasgow Authorities, the Director went orth to assist in the formation of a local Association. A meeting \\'as he ld in the City Chambers , Glasgow , on Thursday, November 19th, at which a large and representative audience was present and much interest evoked by a recital of t he work accom– plished and the work we hoped t o do . The Lady Belhaven and Stenton was elected as President an d Miss R . F . K ennedy as Hon . Secretary of t he Branch . Kathleen Gonville Bromhead was the daughter of Colonel Sir Benjamin Parnell Bromhead, 4th Bt. and Hannah Smith.1,2 She married Lt.-Col. Robert Edward Archibald Udny-Hamilton, 11th Lord Belhaven and Stenton, son of Archibald William Hamilton and Elizabeth Ann Billyard, on 15 November 1898.1 She died on 1 December 1935. From 15 November 1898, her married name became Hamilton. As a result of her marriage, Kathleen Gonville Bromhead was styled as Lady Belhaven and Stenton on 31 March 1918. From 1934, her married name became Udny-Hamilton." |
Miss Lanfear | 1925 | , who is a member of the Council of the Electrical Association for \ i\Tomen |
A . L. Lawrence | 1925 | |
Lister | 1925 | doing especially well in the track events; she also competed at Brooklands the other clay against many well known male drivers, beat– ing most of them |
BARBARA McLAREN | 1925 | head of the Tracing Departmem of M essrs: Henry Sinton, Ltd., Engine~rs, Manchester. She was an apprentice tracer in 1898. |
L. F. Nettlefold | 1925 | |
D. G. Park | 1925 | WES Greenock |
Miss Philipson | 1925 | |
Edith Pollitt | 1925 | Miss P ollitt, who contributes an article to this issue, is engaged as vractica1 demonstrator to the Princeps E lectrical Clocks. We discovered Miss Po11itt at Wembley during our recent Conference, where we learned that she already had a good deal of practical experience, having been right through the shops of the firm for wl1ich she is \vorking. |
R . Rankin | 1925 | |
PHILIP SNOWDEN | 1925 | |
Professor Caroline Spurgeon | 1925 | |
W . C. P. Tapper | 1925 | |
Tuke | 1925 | |
Brenda Voysey | 1925 | |
E. E. WILSON | 1925 | |
Wintringham | 1925 | |
Witcombe | 1925 | A few months ago a small garage and hire business was started by Mrs. Witcombe at Hall Green Birmingham, -vvho has now a nice little fleet of cars, and large premises. She is booked up , for months ahead for hire jobs, she herself driving her " nervy " customers. Mrs. Wit– combe has worked the business up and runs it entirely herself . |
Mary Armstrong | 1926 | |
Christina Barrowman | 1926 | http://www.universitystory.gla.ac.uk/biography/?id=WH18547&type=P Degree Information: MBChB (1911) ; BSc (1913)date of birth as 21 February 1886. |
Kathleen Bunker | 1926 | apprentice to Margaret Partridge |
Doris W. Butler | 1926 | who was for a period of four yea rs employed by the Metropolitan Vickers Electrical Company at Manchester, in th eir Transformer Engineering Department, is at present acting as assistant to the Executive Engineer of the Clyde Valley Electrical Power Company at Glasgow. H er work is mostly con– nected ·with th e pr eparation of generating statis– tics for the Company's records, and for such other objects as the E lectricity Commissioner's R eturns an8 W est of Scotland E lectricit v Scheme . See also https://www.scottishpower.co.uk/about-us/ |
Len Chaloner | 1926 | |
Cobb | 1926 | |
Collins | 1926 | another new member, also did yeoman service during the War, being in charge of a Munition Factory employing over 70 girls. Since that time she has studied Electrical Engineering and is now a member of the staff of the Dumore Electrical Co., and is in sole charge of the R ewinding and R epair Department of this Firm, which is engaged in the marketing of electrical t ools. |
Davidson | 1926 | Miss Davidson , who is a member of the Insti– tute of Metals, has been for some time with the British Thompson-Houston Co . She took her B .Sc. at Glasgow in pure science, and later re– turned to college, taking up metallurgy and metallography. She is employed as metalligra– phist by the B .T.H. Works, which have, as far as possible, made use of scientifically trained women. Untrained girls are employed in pre– paring the specimens for microscopic examina– t ion and helping in the photography. Owing to economic pressure, however, . these conditions may soon be considerably altered. P reference is to be given t o men, and competition of women in the labour market is not to be encouraged there. |
Bettine M. Davies (Cyril Moir) | 1926 | |
Minna N Dennes | 1926 | |
S. P . Dickson | 1926 | |
T. J. Dillon | 1926 | |
CHRISTIAN M. SHAW SCOTT | 1926 | first woman student in metal! urgy, and also the first woman to take an app l_ied science course at ti-t..: New University Buildings at Edgbaston, Bir– mingh am. |
Margaret Eurich | 1926 | |
Madame Faucon Johnson | 1926 | received a silver medal from the Societe pour l'encouragement du Progres, as a tribute for herclever invention of a device whereby human voice or music can be recorded on motion picture film instead of records |
Fell | 1926 | |
G W Ford | 1926 | |
C. Grier | 1926 | |
Alderman Hammer | 1926 | |
Mary Harrison | 1926 | |
Hodge | 1926 | of ELMA |
Florence Hodge | 1926 | |
Holmes | 1926 | |
E . M . Kennedy | 1926 | |
Kennedy | 1926 | is Joint Managing Director and Secretary of the well-known firm of J. B. Stone and Co., Ltd. |
Kermode | 1926 | 1st female member of Inst of Metals. In Shaw on women in metallurgy |
Kirkpatrick | 1926 | |
Lady Brooks | 1926 | |
Lady Cowan | 1926 | |
Lady Rhondda | 1926 | |
B. 0 . Lambourn | 1926 | |
Lawson | 1926 | |
LeSueur | 1926 | |
E. E. Lindsay | 1926 | Some time ago the W.E.S. was asked to find a woman engineer who would be prepared to join a Mission which -vvas being organised by Lady Carnarvon to go to Albania in connection with au Anti-Malarial Mission. Miss E. Lindsay, one of our Scottish members, who has trained and worked as a Civil Engineer, volun– teered for the post. The 1\'Iission consists of two '"'omen doctors, a nurse, a chauffeuse, and a woman engineer. Miss Ijndsay arrived at the State Hospital, Valona, Albania, on March 21st, having stayed some time previously in Italy, receiving instruction in anti-malarial work. Her duties at present consist of organising and sur er– vising the work of draining, ditching and filling in pits, etc., and in clipping for and examining mosquito larvce . She writes that the work is most interesting but progress is necessarily very slow. We shall hope to publish in a future issue of the Magazine an article by Miss Lindsay on her own work and that of the Mission. |
I. M. Lindsay | 1926 | |
Llewelyn Davis | 1926 | |
Mallinson | 1926 | Woolwich Arsenal Research Department em·ployed women on metallurgical work in the later part of the war and afterwards. Miss Mallinson published work in the Journal of the Institute of Metals in 1921 (1) The Season Cracking of Brass and other Copper Alloys " (with Dr. Moore and Mr. Beckinsale). Miss Fell published work in the Journal of the Iron and Steel Institute in 1919 (2). Both Miss Mallinson and Miss Fell are now married, and, as far as I am aware, there are now no women employed at the Royal Arsenal on metallurgy . |
J McMinn | 1926 | |
Tatiana Moretzky | 1926 | USSR |
Florencc Nightingale | 1926 | |
O'Hea | 1926 | |
A. K . Osborn | 1926 | |
E . H . Parsons | 1926 | |
E. Place | 1926 | |
Dorothy Poole | 1926 | , who, during the War did good work as a Dilution Officer and who received part of her training at Messr . mith, Barker and Wilson's Works at H alifax. |
Olive Priest | 1926 | |
C.M. Shaw Scott | 1926 | |
D. E. Simpson | 1926 | of Hull, who, although an invalid, car– ried on her husband's business after his death . She acts as engineer's merchant, and has a very successful business, which deals in a wide variety of equipment, ranging from boiler house specialities, superheaters, etc., to orders for large supplies of nails of all sizes. Mrs . Simp– son attributes her success in this field to the fact that she deals direct with the actual manufac– turer or maker. advert for her firm of agents for gauges etc in most issues of vols 1 &2 |
Madame St. Gervais | 1926 | , who has put on the market the Metr.-Inch Micrometer, which introduces an ingenious method of directly reading micrometer indications to metric and English standards 0f measurement on the same instru– ment . The cumbersome method of dealing with two micrometers is, therefore, overcome. The Micrometer has been passed as Grade I. by the National Physical Laboratory, and we under– stand that Madame St. Gervais bas already received a number of large orders for this unique measuring instrument . [2]] |
Helen Steers | 1926 | |
Goodwin Tuckwell | 1926 | |
Anne Ashley | 1927 | |
Dame Henrietta Barnett | 1927 | |
EDITH Beesley | 1927 | |
F. O. Besant | 1927 | , who is Secretary and Director of Messrs. Robert P. B esant, Ltd., Shipbuilders, Rochester |
Mme. Blanchard | 1927 | |
Mama Ruella Capac | 1927 | |
Chisholm Cole | 1927 | |
de Beauvoir Stocks | 1927 | |
Duchene | 1927 | (from the French University of Labour), |
Mona E. Eck | 1927 | has been elected a Fellow of the Chemical Society. Miss Eck is at present working as a Technical assistant in the offices of the firm of Eck and Brook, Ltd . , Electrical Engineers , of Westminster. |
Isabel HADFIELD | 1927 | |
Haldane | 1927 | |
P. Barbara Ingleby | 1927 | |
Johnstone-Noad | 1927 | http://www.motorsportmagazine.com/archive/article/october-1968/36/they-raced-thames |
Eliott Lynn, Lady Heath | 1927 | |
W. Mason | 1927 | |
Norah Millar | 1927 | |
Moisant | 1927 | |
Moore | 1927 | |
Wolfe Murray | 1927 | |
O'Brien | 1927 | |
Eleanor Page | 1927 | |
Penson | 1927 | during the war, taught 83 Canadian Airmen to fly, runs a school of aviation with her brothers and another sister at San Antonio, and is herself a brilliant pilot . She is also at present employed in designing for the American Air Force at Washington . She is little and dainty, but a thoroughly competent airwoman and always inspires respectful admiration in those who are lucky enough to be her passengers. |
Ranald | 1927 | |
MARGARET Roper | 1927 | |
N. W. Speed | 1927 | |
Spurling | 1927 | |
Catherine Stinson | 1927 | |
Nellie Swartz | 1927 | Miss Swartz is the Director of the Bureau of Women in Industry, w York tat Department of Labour . |
Tattersall | 1927 | |
Thornton | 1927 | one of the pioneer s among women motor boat owners, and a very e•arly driver of high powered racing car s. W ell-known at Southampton and Cowes before the W ar , she owned several successful motor boats. Mrs. Thornton 's garage was also a most inspiring sight to the real motor enthusiast, for she owned and loved no less than four Itala Cars, r anging from the small t ouring 24 h .p. , to the ceLebrated L ondon /Monte Carlo, and London / St. Peters– burg (P etrogr ad) r·ecord breakers, the 80 h .p . and 120 h .p. Ital as. As well as these, Mrs . Thornton also kept her 40 h.p . B en z tourer, and the baby of the gar age was a miniature P eugeot. I h ave used the word " loved," as it was liter– all y true, as all these car s wer.e. tended with t he utmost care, and however long they were laid aside they were all always in the most perfect condi t ion and brilli ant with polish both inside and out. Mrs. Thornton was an untiring War driver. She, greatly at her own expense, equip– ped bot.h motor ca;r and motor barg·es in France for hospital use, and then devoted! her own time to driving a motor plough in England. She h as kept up this occupation until quite recently in the South of England . Unfortunately , her vast keenness for motoring h as been curtailed to a great ext ent by Bolshevic interest in her Russian properties, but I am alwa.ys hoping to hear that she b as once more joined the r anks of the enthusiasts for r aeing car s and boats. |
Trotman | 1927 | |
Viscountess Grey of Fallodon | 1927 | |
Ellen . Wilkinson | 1927 | |
Marguerite Wolff | 1927 | |
Catherine Wright | 1927 | |
Barry | 1928 | |
H. Boullen | 1928 | |
Kathleen Bunker | 1928 | Student Member of the Institution of Electrical Engineers . |
Connor | 1928 | , who h as had considerable experi ence as a Telephone Engineer, and is now engaged o.n .work concemed with the applications of E lectnc1ty for Medical Purposes , |
S. F . Davies | 1928 | |
M. M. Dunn | 1928 | MIQ Of Hull, is the second woman to be Elected a member of the Institute of Quarrying . Mrs. Dunn rece tly made her maiden speech before the Institute nd crea ted a very excellent impress ion . |
Urquart Dykes | 1928 | |
Hoover | 1928 | |
WALTER LAYTON | 1928 | |
I . Monckton | 1928 | |
Muriel Mott Moore | 1928 | |
M. I. Norton | 1928 | |
SICELE O'BRIEN | 1928 | |
Abbott Osborn | 1928 | |
MADGE Piercy | 1928 | W. H. A. Rob ertson & Co ., Ltd., of Bedford |
Purves | 1928 | |
Mary Robinson (engineer) | 1928 | |
Edna Wells-Jerome | 1928 | |
Vega Willson | 1928 | |
EVA B. WYNBURNE | 1928 | |
Llewellyn B. Atkinson | 1929 | |
Katbe Bohm | 1929 | |
Hon G. Borthwick | 1929 | |
Margaret Colchester | 1929 | |
C. U . Cole | 1929 | |
Mae V . Connolly | 1929 | The first womnn to bP appointed an eng inering as i tant in any c it,~- Cl epartment wns named by B oroupth ])resident Harvey to ser ve in the construction brnnch of the Queen 's Higb – way Bureau. She is Miss Mae V . Connolly, of 32-50, Eighty-second Sheet , J ackson H eight . " Miss ConnollY h as been attach ed to t he bureau for four yem:s ns a clerk , but l1 as stwli ecl a t night at Hunter College, and took exten sion eourses at Columbia, which en abled h er to take the competitive examination for engineerin 17 nssistant and. pass " -ith a civil service mark of 96 per cent., giving h er thirty-third. plaC'e on tbf' li st. H e1· father and brother both are engineers. · · New Yorlr H era ld 'l'riiHm e, 7th ifarch , 1~2 |
Constance H. Cowper-Coles | 1929 | |
Professor Winifred Cullis | 1929 | |
Senorita Maria del Pilar Careaga | 1929 | Brief mention that she has qualified as railway engineer |
Despard | 1929 | |
J. Dicks | 1929 | of Winche ter. Miss Dicks is a member of the Electrical Contractors' Association. Be ing responsible fnr caerying on the contracting business of Messrs . Dicks, Ltd., of Winchester |
Christabel Eaton | 1929 | Obituary . . Members of the Society who have attended recent Annual Conferences will learn with sorrow of the passing away of Miss Christabel E aton, of Cheltenham, who was one of the original members of the ·women 's Engineering Society . Miss Ea,ton did very wonderful work at \iVoolwich Arsenal during the War and always maintained the greatest interest in our work. |
Edgecumbe | 1929 | |
Clare Fitzpatrick | 1929 | Australian , has been elected a Member of the Society. Mrs . .Fitzpatrick, who is the daughter of an J:Dngineer, was <l,rticled in 1925 to William Beid Dell , M.I.C.E ., the Senior Consultant Firm of CiYil Eng ineers i11 Melbourne. She spent nine months in the firm 's survey camp as Contract Surveyor for the Government of Victor ia, Crown T-'ands Department , surveying mountainous ,·i.rgin forest count r y, and being in charge of the survey party for four month s . Owillg to un£ore en 0ireumstances, Mn;. Fitzpatrick cam to England in M ay, 1928, whe1·e, through the W .E.8., sh e obtain d a post with t he Harold Wood Brick C.o., JJtd ., ns Dr;wght;sm::m and surveyor . |
Helen W. Hardy | 1929 | (Director of H ome Lighting Public Service Electric & Gas Company, Newark, NY |
Rosalind Haslett | 1929 | |
F. Holdsworth | 1929 | |
Alice M . Kennedy | 1929 | |
Kneubuhl | 1929 | |
l'oynbee | 1929 | |
Lady Hodder Williams | 1929 | |
Elsie N Lang. | 1929 | |
MARIE Lawson | 1929 | (Managing Director of the Sheridan Machinery Co., Ltd. |
Le Mesurier | 1929 | |
Althea Lepper | 1929 | h as a hi~hly techni cal job with the Consolidated Gas Comp any of New York. She is an engineer and tests all new gas appl iances |
Leverkus | 1929 | |
Valdemar Leverton | 1929 | |
Ruth Levi | 1929 | Miss Ruth Levi, B.Sc., As oci.ute Memb er, h a t aken Honours in Physics, and is now doing r esearch ·work at Univer ity College, London. |
Marchioness of Carisbrooke | 1929 | |
Louise Mcilroy | 1929 | |
Joan Medlicott | 1929 | student at St. L eon ards School, St. Andrew's, and is one day hoping to become a.n Aeronautical Engineer. Whatever may be the opinion of a certain very young Member of Parliament, who recently thought it necessary to air his views in the House regarding the ability of women pilots, the distinction of being the first to qualify in the Bristol and Wessex Aeroplane Club Blind-Flying Course goes t o Miss J o a n Medlicott, who is an apprentice a t the Airwork Bristol Airport workshops. Miss Medlicott qualified after only 5J hr. flying " under the h o o d , " t h e final test being a compass course to a point 25 miles from Bristol and return (Flight, 8 April 1932). worked at Whitchurch Airport near Bristol in the 1930s. Keith is writing a history of a British Aviation Company called Airwork. They had a depot at Whitchurch Airport near Bristol in the 1930s. One of their employees was a Joan Medlicott who was an apprentice with them. This was most unusual for the time as although there were female pilots, female engineers/mechanics were very few (although she was a pilot as well). |
Grace E. New | 1929 | The Women 's Automobile and Sports Association is responsible for t h e fi rst girl road scout, Miss Grace New, who made her appearance r ecently on th e roads. |
Nichols-Moore | 1929 | |
M. A. Nightingale | 1929 | Miss M. A. Nightingale , B .Sc., Associate Memb er , tudied at University College, Notting– h am, and specialised in Chemi try and Physics. She is an accomplished experimentalist. |
Rosemary Northcroft | 1929 | |
Parr | 1929 | |
G. Parry Morgan | 1929 | Miss G. M. Parry Morgan, Graduate Member, is studying for h er Engineerin g degree at Univer– sity College, London . She has also taken her First Year .Final Math ematics and Physics at Cardiff University. |
Johanna Petchanatz | 1929 | madame Johanna Petchanatz, who since t he death of h er husband has carried on h is businesl; in J ugo-Slavia as a factor in connection with th0 sale of electric and pneumatic tools. |
Winifred Pink | 1929 | |
E. M . Rennie | 1929 | chief Sales Manager for the J.B .R . Tool Co. During the War, prior to joining this Company, Mrs . R ennie was in charge of a bay at the Westinghouse Co. , Trafford Park, and also spent three years as lady superintendent at the British Metallic Roll Company, where she was in full charge of 250 women comprising night and day shifts and wespons ible for the output of tank links from 35 milring machines which had to be correct within very fine limits . The setters-up took their orders from her on these machines, in addition to the women operatiYes. |
Harry Salmon | 1929 | |
Mrs,. Forbes Sempill | 1929 | |
Shilling | 1929 | Beatrice's mother |
J. St. Clair Henderson, | 1929 | |
Van Kleeck | 1929 | |
Vignoles | 1929 | |
Viscountess Elibank | 1929 | Blanche Alice Scott |
E. A. Walker | 1929 | |
Mary Woodman | 1929 |
1930s
[edit]Name | Year | Notes |
---|---|---|
Jenny Markelin-Svenson | 1930 | It seems that women engineers are not very common in Finland. Only two qualifiecl from the Polytechnical School, that is, before 1908 : Mrs Jenny Markelin-Svenson in 1905, and Mrs. Ragnhild Sergeliu in 1906. Mrs. Jenny Markelin-Svensson was what we call a 'Road and water constructor" building road. and bridges (civil engineer ): she studied factory inspection and workers' protection in England and Germany, became State Factory Inspector in 1908, Inspector of Working Places in Helsingfors in 1913, and from 1918 till her death, in 1929, she held the po ition of Assistant Chief Factory Inspector under the Ministry .of Social Affairs . |
B. A. Godwin | 1930 | |
A Voipioylund | 1930 | |
B. Davis | 1930 | |
A. B. Godwin | 1930 | |
B. E. H . Coles | 1930 | Miss B. E. H . Coles, after spending some mon t.hs in the Showroom of a Fi rm selling Domestic E lectrical Apparat us, is now taking a course in E lectrical Engineering at t he Un.iversit y of Shefli eld . |
B. S. Park | 1930 | |
A. H. Dale | 1930 | may be AB Dale of NPL optics dept 1919 |
Bailie Jean Roberts | 1930 | |
Baroness Pol Boel | 1930 | |
Baroness von Blixen Finecke | 1930 | |
A. P. Thurston | 1930 | |
Baroness von Rutten | 1930 | |
A.H. Dale | 1930 | |
Adria Buchanan | 1930 | Miss Adria Buchanan new WES member, has been with a consulting Heating and Ventilating Engineer for the. past six years , during which time she has dealt with practically all sides of this business, including work in connection with the Drawing Office , visiting jobs to obtain particulars , assisting with plans and specifications , keeping in touch wit h the progress of the ·work , and checking Final Accounts. Attended Sanitary institute meetings in 1934. http://www.gracesguide.co.uk/Adria_Buchanan Adria Buchanan M.R.San.I., 111.1.H.V.E., A.I Art). 1939 Partner, J. Roger Preston & Partners, Consulting Engrs., Dilke House, Malet Street, London, W.C.1. |
Billington Greig | 1930 | |
Aili-Salli Ahde | 1930 | |
Birdie Toynbee | 1930 | reminiscences of her WW1 work |
AINO WUOLLE | 1930 | Miss Wuoll e, who i s one of the outstan ding proje sional women in Hels ingfors, is the daught er of the Head of the Technical College ther~ , f!1~d helped hirf! wi,th much of the organisation of the World Power Conference Delegates msa to Fznland, ~ncluding the HydTo- electric 'cheme in Imatra. She holds the degree of Mag.PhiL. |
Bramhall | 1930 | Mrs. Bramhall , the daugh ter of Mrs. L . A. Willson, M.B.E ., while still the Secre– tary of Messr s. Smith , Barker and Will– son , manages to find time to help her husband to start up the "Bramhall Centre Co.," specialising in lathe centres of all t - Kathleen Vega Bramhall I think. |
Bright | 1930 | |
ALFRED BUTTON | 1930 | |
Brindley Noake | 1930 | Mrs. Brindley Noake was, previous to her m arriage, Manageress to Messrs . Rabone, Manufacturing Jewellers , Birmingham. She comes of an engineering family. H er ances– tor, J ames B rindley, was t h e F ather of Brit ish Canals, and t h e late Sir H arry Brindley (Vickers-Japan ) was a near relative. Mrs. Noake has r ecently invented a Fuel Oil System, details of which we hope to give later. She has been elected an Associate Member |
Alice Jessie Sheppee | 1930 | |
Alice M. Ellis | 1930 | |
Alice M. Kennedy | 1930 | |
Alice Rudeen | 1930 | |
C. G. Cottrell | 1930 | |
Alice Williams | 1930 | |
Anita Gronvik | 1930 | |
C. Halford | 1930 | |
Ann Laughlin | 1930 | |
C. Joy Clissold | 1930 | Miss Joy Clissold took h er B. Sc. Degree with First Class Honour in t he Engineering Faculty at Bri stol Universitv, and h as for tha last eighteen month s been" working as Draugh tsm an with H . J . H. King & Co., Colliery , Matting and General Engineers, in Gloucestershire, of which firm h er fa ther is a p artner . Miss Clissold, who is in the Drawing office of Messrs. H .!. H. King and Co. , Ltd., believes that Pneumatic Conveying has a great future . |
Ann R. B. Moir | 1930 | Ann R. B. Moir holds ground engineer 's licences A and C, and is employed as a maintenance engineer by the Scottish Flying Club at Renfrew Aerodrome. M |
Caro Olden | 1930 | |
Anna Holm | 1930 | |
Cecile Matheson | 1930 | |
Cecilia V . Galvin | 1930 | Miss Cecilia V. Galvin has just Laken her clcgree in Civil Engin ering a t the ational niversity of Irelanrl in Cork , and she is now hoping io go in to a Civil Engineering firm . Miss Galvin was elected a Member. Possibly died Dec 2009 as Cecil Oconnell |
Charl Ormond William | 1930 | |
CHARLOTTE NAISH | 1930 | |
Congresswoman O'Day | 1930 | |
Cora Goldsworthy | 1930 | Miss Cora Goldsworthy, i e timating and o·eneml secretary of the Abbey Art etal Com– pany, a family bu in , in which her fath er and thre brothers are al o working. |
Corbett Ashby | 1930 | |
Councillor Messenger | 1930 | director of the Bungay Gas and Electricity Company . |
Councillor Moore | 1930 | |
Countess of Elgin and Kincardine | 1930 | |
CouNTESS OF OxFORD AND AsQUITH | 1930 | |
Craig McGeachy | 1930 | |
Crout | 1930 | |
Curtis-Brown | 1930 | |
D. G. Gordon | 1930 | |
D. M. Rhodes | 1930 | |
D. Mona Hirst | 1930 | Miss Mona Hirst, since leaving Birmingham University with a 1st Class degree, M.A., in Mathematics, has been Technical Assistant in the Aeronautical Department of Messr s. Boulton and Paul ; a lecturer in Mathematic at Queen 's University, Belfast ; and Junior Sc.ientific Officer at the Royal Aircraft Estab– lishment, S. Farnborough . She is a Mem– ber of the London Mathematical Society, and an Associate Fellow of the Royal Aeronautical Society. · Miss Hirst wishes to enter into partnership with a consultant, or a structu ral engineer with an established practice . |
Dame Gwendoline Trubshaw | 1930 | |
Dame Maria Ogilvie Gordon | 1930 | |
Dame Maud Lawrence | 1930 | |
Davies | 1930 | |
Davis | 1930 | |
Dean Virginia Gildersleeve | 1930 | |
Denison | 1930 | |
Dennison | 1930 | |
Dora Greene | 1930 | |
Dora IBBERSON | 1930 | |
Doris A. How | 1930 | Miss D. A. How, after three years' general Technical Research , has for the last five years been vvorking as an assistant in the Radio R esearch Laboratory of the London Electric Wire and Smith 's Company, where her work consists chiefly of design of components for vVireless Receivers. |
Dorothy A. Baker | 1930 | |
Dorothy E. M. Garfitt | 1930 | |
Dorothy E. Wiggins | 1930 | |
Dorothy Fairey | 1930 | |
Dorothy Heneker | 1930 | |
Dorothy Presslie | 1930 | MISS DOROTHY G. PRESSLIE on h er recent marriag to Captain A. MecN. Gordon, M.C. |
Dorothy Smith | 1930 | |
Douglas | 1930 | |
E . M. Willis | 1930 | |
E. A. Ford | 1930 | |
E. Clements | 1930 | |
E. E. Edwards | 1930 | |
E. E. Verity | 1930 | |
E. Elmitt Edwards | 1930 | |
E. F. Colston | 1930 | |
E. f. Willis | 1930 | |
E. L. Waldie | 1930 | |
E. M. Kennedy | 1930 | Pic. WESPres article about her work |
E. M. Willis | 1930 | |
E. M. Wood | 1930 | |
E. MURIEL POGGI. | 1930 | Miss Poggi is Instr uctor in the D epartment of Geology, University of Illinois, U.S.A. She had her early training at London University:..(at the London School of Economics and University College) and took h er M.A. in 1928. In addition to lecturing she is always busy on research topics and has r.:cently been investigating the mineral industries of Illinois. |
E. Rowell | 1930 | Miss E. Rowell, who has~ been elected a Fun Member,· is the Managing Director of Rowell & Co . , Motor Dealer s, and for the past five year s has been selling and demonst rating all kinds of Motor Vehicles, including Pleasure Cars , Commercial Motors and Tr actor s . |
E. Scott Elliot | 1930 | |
Earlene White | 1930 | |
Earwood | 1930 | |
Eastman | 1930 | |
EDITH 0. Mercer | 1930 | pic of girl guide |
Edith M. Douglas | 1930 | Born in India she had been educated mainly in England . Her marriage to Major C. H. Douglas bad introduced her to engineering and financial and political matters, the first when he was designer of the Post Office London railway, lat er as Assistant Superintendent of the Royal Air craft F actory, and at present as co-director of the Swanwick Shipyard, |
Edith Picton-Tmbervill | 1930 | |
Edna Mosely | 1930 | |
Eleanor COMERFORD | 1930 | |
Eleanor Reith | 1930 | |
Elise Kay Gresswell | 1930 | |
Elizabeth Craig | 1930 | |
Elizabeth Heywood | 1930 | |
ELIZABETH Richardson | 1930 | Mrs. Elizabeth Richa:rdson, the first woman to receive the Gold Medal awarded each year by the Institute of Patentees Exhibition, describe s here her methods of drawing up " Graphs and Zonogmphs " for the identification of Radio Transmitting Stations . |
Elizabeth Sloan Chesser | 1930 | |
Elli Bjorksten | 1930 | |
Elsie Godwin | 1930 | |
Elsie M. Gregory McGill | 1930 | |
Emma Clark, Lady Beilby | 1930 | |
Emma Irene Estrom | 1930 | |
ENA GAlUS-SMITH | 1930 | |
Ester Paulson | 1930 | |
Ethel R . Nicholson (Lambton) | 1930 | is now on the technical staff at the Institute of Welding but her special claim to envy from too many women engineer s and others is that she worked on aero engines at de Havillands and at Brooklands. |
Ethel Willans | 1930 | Miss E. Willans, who has joined a an c: o– ciate, is the Chief W oman officer of the Ga Light ancl Coke ompany, with whom she ha been for many years, having been responibl e for training many of the women who now holcl po ts a demonstrator . he wa recently elected a member of the Illuminating l~ngineering ociety. |
Eveleyn E. Sanderson | 1930 | |
F . E. Wentworth-Sheilds | 1930 | |
F . J. Taylor | 1930 | |
F. E . Jones | 1930 | |
F. Earengey | 1930 | |
F. M . Wood | 1930 | Miss F. M . Wood , M .A., is a memher of the Royal aeronauticnl society. Air ~[mi:try's Air navigation Examinntion in March on. the first time it was open to women she passed OUt flrst with flying colour".. |
F. M. Shepherd | 1930 | First Woman Assistant Examiner at the Patent Office.-Miss F. M. Shepherd's qualifica– ion for the honour of being the first woman to enter the P atent Office i a London .University Honours Degr ee and the Certificate of the ivil Service Examinations for P atent Office Examiner , which ha b en open to women for the la t two yea rs. 1i s Shepherd, who, during her scholastie; car eer , peciali eel in chemistry, now devotes h er energies mainly to chemical produc s, and in particular to dyestuff inventions ent in by inventors of various nationalities. It is intere ting to note that as an official of the P atent Office, however stimulated by the inven– tions which surround her, l\!Iis Shepherd may not patent any inventions of her own. |
F. M. Wood | 1930 | Miss F. M. Wood and Miss W . Spooner were the first women to pass the Air Navigation Examination of the Air Ministry. They took the examination in March , 19]0, and Miss Wood was placed first on the list. |
F. R. Clark | 1930 | |
F. V. McKenzie | 1930 | |
F. Watson Ingram | 1930 | |
Fanny Honn | 1930 | Miss Fanny Honn , timber sell er , who is Office Manager of the Kemi Timber Company, Finland |
Flack | 1930 | |
Florence Sangster | 1930 | |
Francis B. Bradfield | 1930 | In a talk before the D 'Abernon Club recently (approx sprin 1935) , Air Commodore J . A. Chamier paid high tribute to the work of Miss Bradfield, M.A. Miss Bradfield is in charge of the mall wind t unnel ect ion of the model research department at the Royal Aircraft Establishment. |
Alice Franselau-Roehmann | 1930 | |
Else Sigerus | 1930 | |
Ilsa Essers | 1930 | In short article about German women engineers |
Ilse K Knott-ter Meer | 1930 | Frau lise Knott-ter Meer , Dip lom-Ingenieur, Member . We cordially welcome :Frau Knott-ter Meer as our first full German Member . She is a Member of the · Verein Deutscher Ingenieure of Germany and holds the di stinction of being the fir st woman member of that organisation. She studied at the Techniscben Hochschulen of Hanover and Munich and worked at clitreren t factori es at Hanover, at Dresden and at Danzig in the International 'Engineering and Ship– bui lding Company . :Frau Knott-ter Meer is a Mechani– ca l Engin eer and is marri ed to an E lec trical Eng ineer . She is widely travelled, both in Europe and Ameri ca, and we hope to have the pleasure of publishin g an arti cle by her in the near future. |
Frau Winninger | 1930 | |
Asta Hampe | 1930 | 1st German member, article abouit her |
Fraulein Bothfeldt | 1930 | |
Hanna Wassman | 1930 | |
Hedwig Busch | 1930 | |
Kathe Bohm | 1930 | |
M. Heise | 1930 | |
Maria Frommer | 1930 | |
Ruth Bail | 1930 | |
Froken Nanna With | 1930 | |
G. M . Giles | 1930 | |
G. Z. de Ferranti | 1930 | |
GISELA URBAN | 1930 | |
Gordon Holmes | 1930 | |
Grace Aitken | 1930 | |
Greene | 1930 | |
Greta Nygard | 1930 | |
Gwen Parry | 1930 | |
Gwyer | 1930 | |
Gwyneth Parry Morgan | 1930 | |
H . C. Hollands | 1930 | |
H. Bonney | 1930 | |
H. C. Cook | 1930 | Mrs. Maurice A. P . Tuckey |
H. R. WALMESLEY | 1930 | |
Hagarty | 1930 | |
Hage | 1930 | |
Hamlyn | 1930 | |
Hanbury Hopkins | 1930 | |
Hancock | 1930 | |
Hannah DIXON | 1930 | |
Harriet R . Hoskins | 1930 | HARRIET R. HOSKINS, Head of the Tracing Department, The Sturtevant Engineering Co. , Ltd. |
Hasell | 1930 | |
Helen B . Shaw | 1930 | |
Helen Havener | 1930 | |
Helen M.M. Minoprio | 1930 | |
Helen Monica Maurice (. A. . J ackson) | 1930 | |
Helena G. Davey | 1930 | |
Helny Bergborn | 1930 | Miss Helny Bergborn, the fir st woman factory inspector, Finland |
Hertha Emde | 1930 | |
Hilary Newitt | 1930 | |
Hilda M Lynn | 1930 | |
Hobkirk | 1930 | Mrs. Hobkirk is also interested in Motor E ngineering, and has taken the Rolls-Royce Course of I nstructi on at t heir Service Depot. She is now studying with a view to obtaining her Na tion al Certificate , and has been elected an ARsocia te Member . |
Hogre Allmanna Laroverk | 1930 | |
Hoskins | 1930 | |
Howard Marshall | 1930 | |
Howard Roberts | 1930 | |
I . M. Trafford | 1930 | |
I. McVean | 1930 | by MRs . I. MeVEAN ·who has been elected President of · the Winchester Chamber of Commerce. Mrs. McVean is a well-known electrical contra ctor and she was responsible for the electrical work in vVinchester Cathedral. |
I. Taviner | 1930 | |
Ingeborg Lauren | 1930 | |
Irene M . Austin | 1930 | |
Ishbel Marchioness of Aberdeen and Temair | 1930 | |
Isobel Scott Elliot | 1930 | |
Ivor McClure | 1930 | |
J . Clayton | 1930 | |
J . L . Adamson | 1930 | |
J . L. Adamson | 1930 | |
J. Crawford Conybeare | 1930 | reminiscences of her WW1 work |
J. Dicks | 1930 | Miss J. Dicks, head of J. Dicks, Ltd .,winchester, has secured the contract to instal electricity in Winchester Cathedral. Miss Dicks has a staff of 75, and she directs not only the electrical contracting side, but also the water– engineering, radio and plumbing departments. |
J. P . Stracey | 1930 | |
Jane Faraday | 1930 | |
Jeanne Savage | 1930 | Mrs. Jeanne Savage, Member, holds a high administrative position, and is doing v ery unusual work for a woman. She was boTn in Paris o£ French parents, and was educated in France, Holland, Belgium, Germany, Spain and Eng– l and. She joined h er present firm, Messrs. T. C. Jones & Co., Ltd., Structural Engineers, as Private Secretary to the Chairman. In 1926 she became Advertis ing Manager to the Company, and in 1928 S ales Manager, which pos ition she now holds with distinction. During the course of h er work she h as gained a considerable amount of Engineering knowledge, and is thoroughly con– versant with Machine Tools, Contractors' Plant, etc. She has even been enterprising enough to learn to drive steam c r an es and excavators . Mrs. S avage is a m emb er of the Publicity Club of London. |
Jeffrey | 1930 | |
Jennie Broad | 1930 | |
JESSY MAIR | 1930 | |
Joan Beale | 1930 | Miss Joan Beale, Associate Member, is at present studying at University College, London. She is a m ember of University College Engineer– ing Society, London, and hopes to take up Engineering as a career. |
Joan Medlicott | 1930 | Miss Joan Medlicott has gone to Air Works, Ltd., of Bristol , where she is working for her Ground Engineer's Certificate and a Pilot's Licence . |
Joanna Pecanac | 1930 | 1st Yugoslavian member. Article about her |
Joy Davison | 1930 | |
Julie Heyneman | 1930 | |
K . E. M.G. Head | 1930 | |
K Gough | 1930 | Miss K . Gough , B.Sc . (Physics) is working in th e R esearch L aboratories of the Dubilier Con– denser Co . She was elect ed an Associate Member. |
K. F . Boyd | 1930 | |
K. Smale | 1930 | Miss K. Smale, Associate Member, .after seven year s' experience as Tracer, is now head of that department in the firm of structuraL en– gineer s for whom sh e works. |
Kamlabai Jog | 1930 | Miss Kamlabai Jog, aged 15, is the first girl student admitt ed to a school of engineering in Bombay-possibly in the whole of India ; she has joined the wireman's class at the Victoria Jubilee Technical Institute. According to her father , t his is only a preliminary course tote t her capacity to stand the strain of physical work; it i his intention that she shall take a course in ground engineering, gliding and aviation , to qualify for an air pilot's licence. |
Kathleen A. Gough | 1930 | |
Kathleen M. Cook | 1930 | Miss K. M. Cook h as been throuo:h t he works of the H ercules Engineer ing Company, of which– her fath er is a Director ,- and is now wor-king for them in an Estimating and Secret ari al capacity. |
L. C. Tate | 1930 | |
L. Goold | 1930 | |
Lacey-Baker | 1930 | |
Lady Gardener | 1930 | |
Lady Graham Wood | 1930 | Lady Graham Wood i the only chief of a teel works in Great Britain, having succeeded to t he post of governing director of the Trafford P ark Steel Warehouses, Manche ter , on the death of her husband, Sir Graham Wood, about six years ago. During the war Lady Graham Wood drove an ambula.nce and developed an inherent interest in mechani cal things gener ally. When she married she found a fresh field for her engineering aptitude in her husband's steel works and t hey are still of continuous and absorbing interest. Lady Graham Wood believes in t he value of per sonal contacts between dir ector and workmen , and u1 t he paymen t of wages t hat exceed tr ade union r ates. Her fait h has so far been ju tified by results.. Article about her in Ottawa Citizen - Jan 23, 1937 |
Lady Hart Dyke | 1930 | |
Lady Kingsley Wood | 1930 | |
Lady Pares | 1930 | |
Lady Shelmerdine | 1930 | |
Lady Swan | 1930 | (President of t he Glasgow and District Bran ch of the E.A.W.). |
Lady Vansittart Neale , | 1930 | |
Lady Verdon-Roe | 1930 | |
Lady Yarrow | 1930 | |
Laimi Leidenius | 1930 | |
Laura Munson | 1930 | |
Laura Nosworthy | 1930 | |
Liisa Vesa | 1930 | |
LIllian F. Lewis | 1930 | |
Linda Melander | 1930 | |
Little | 1930 | |
Lockhart | 1930 | |
Lucinda Prince | 1930 | |
Lydia Helia | 1930 | Finnish bank superintendent |
Lyyli Lukander | 1930 | |
M. A. Havelock | 1930 | (Mrs. T. Macinerney) |
M. C. Tate | 1930 | |
M. Dicker | 1930 | |
M. Mathewson | 1930 | Miss M. Mathewson, having studied the Com– mercial and Financial Side of her business, and acting for t wo yea rs as Secreta ry and Director , is now J oint Managing Director of George Rich ards and Co. , L td. , Machine Tool Makers, of Manchester . |
M. P. Waters | 1930 | Miss M. P. Waters is Assistant to Works Super– intendent in the Acetylene Works of a large firm of Oxygen, Acetylene and Rare Ga es Engineers, and her interesting past experience ha covered six years in the motor repairs shops and gas compressing shops, and thr e years in charge of the tran port department. She has r ecently been appointed Driving Examiner to the Ministry of Tran port. |
M. R. K. Burge | 1930 | |
M. R. MILNES | 1930 | article about her work as an electrical generation engineer |
M. S. WELLESLEY | 1930 | |
M. V. Griffiths | 1930 | |
M. Williamson | 1930 | |
M.A. Havelock | 1930 | |
M.P. Waters | 1930 | |
Mabel Macferran | 1930 | |
Mactaggart | 1930 | |
Madam Marcet | 1930 | |
Madame Antonietta Paoli-Pogliani, | 1930 | |
Madame Caplan | 1930 | |
Madame Cullis | 1930 | |
Madame de Chaudun–Comte | 1930 | |
Madame Kolontai | 1930 | |
Madame L. Smieva | 1930 | Madame Smieva is at present studying in the Electro-Chemical Department of Messrs. Metropolitan Vickers Electrical Co., Manches– ter with other Russian students, and is shortly returning to her work as a research engineer at the electrical works in Kharkov . |
Madame Marguerite Thibert | 1930 | |
Madame Mitskevitch | 1930 | The Director of an Aircraft factory |
Madame Schroeder | 1930 | |
Madame Yablonskaya. | 1930 | Head of the Furnace Works at the Mariupolsk F.actory |
Madame Yakovleva | 1930 | |
Mademoiselle Trolliet | 1930 | |
Mae V . Connally | 1930 | |
Margaret Cameron | 1930 | we welcome as our youngest subscriber to the Woman Engineer, Miss Margaret Cameron, aged 9t years. We hope that in course of time Margaret will matriculate and join the Society as a Graduate Member. |
Margaret Campbell, | 1930 | |
Margaret G. Little | 1930 | Miss Margaret G. Little is a Di rector of Little, Whyte and Co., L t d., Gr anite En– gmeers and . General Merchants , also t he L ondon R epresentative fo r ·' 1 he Quarry Managers' J ourmd ,' · " Good Roads ,' ' " Cement , Lime ,md Gravel ," etc ., an d is a memb er of the Instit.ute ~£ Quarryi ng. |
MARGARET HOOD | 1930 | |
MARGARET HORSEY | 1930 | |
Margaret Ingals | 1930 | |
Margaret Woolverton | 1930 | |
Marguerite de Munter-Latinis | 1930 | |
Maria Castellani | 1930 | |
Maria Krum | 1930 | |
Maria Ludwika Ziff | 1930 | engineering student at Edinburgh univ |
Marie Luhring | 1930 | |
Marie Reith | 1930 | |
Marjorie Hankin | 1930 | |
Mary Brandon-Jones | 1930 | |
Mary C. Mount | 1930 | |
Mary Corrleroy | 1930 | |
MARY DE BUNSEN | 1930 | |
Mary Jane Dulaney | 1930 | |
Mary Olga Soroka | 1930 | |
Mary S. Allen | 1930 | |
Mary Sutherland | 1930 | |
MARYSE HILSZ | 1930 | |
Mathilde Oftedal | 1930 | |
Mayoress of Southampton | 1930 | |
McGibney | 1930 | |
Meri Aamutahti | 1930 | Finnish heating engineer |
Messervy | 1930 | Miss Messervy (now Mrs. Wilson), who h as gone to live in the Malay States, |
Mickelthwaite | 1930 | |
Mile. Lise Bloch-See | 1930 | |
Miller | 1930 | |
Miriam Ekholm | 1930 | |
Edith Reed | 1930 | bridge designer |
Mistress Cutler | 1930 | |
Mlle C. Umova | 1930 | C. , who put forward her own design for standard blast and open-hearth furnaces in com– petition with the dra-wings of American enginee r s. H e r design has considerably lower ed the cost of construction . |
Mlle E. P. Nadeinskaya | 1930 | working at the Kharkov Railway engine factory a chief engineer of the assembly and r epair depart– ment. In addition to thi she occupies t he chair of the cold working of met als at t he Stalin Industrial Academy . |
Mlle Irene de Paledska | 1930 | |
Mlle Klein | 1930 | |
Mlle Natalie Sholtz | 1930 | invented a new means of telephonic com– munication between towns by means of a subterranean cable. |
Mlle Sophie Grinstein | 1930 | the first woman shipbuilding engineer in the Soviet Union, began her career a an apprentice ironworker, and is now engineer – technician in the LeningTad Marti shipbuilding fa ctor y . The first powerful t imber – carrying motor propelled ships, "Exportles," Dvinoles ,' ' "Volgales " and " Komiles,' ' were built under her super– vision. |
Bolland | 1930 | |
Hesselgren | 1930 | |
Anna Paradowska-Szelagowska | 1930 | |
Anni Voipio | 1930 | |
Madeleine Tissot | 1930 | |
Marie Kubaszewska | 1930 | Mme. Marie Kubaszewska, a Polish woman engineer, has during the last few years, been r esponsible for tunnel and viaduct construction, and the supervision of repair and maintenance in connection with the new Warsaw Railway Line. |
Soubbotitch | 1930 | |
Mollie Olney | 1930 | |
Molly Quennell (Winston F . J . Neal) | 1930 | Miss M.G. B. Quennell, who becomes a member, holds the degree of B.Sc. in Mechanical Engineer– ing of University College, London, and the Diploma of the Imperial College in Advanced Aeronautics. She has had training in the workshops of National Flying Services, in the stressing office of Short Bros., Rochester, and in the airworthiness depart– ment of the Royal Aircraft Establishment. Recently she joined the technical staff of the Britis-h Aircraft Manufacturing Co. Miss Quennell is a student niembe:r of the Royal Aeronautical Society. ' |
Mona Willis | 1930 | |
Mr. M. A. Cloudesley Brereton | 1930 | |
Muriel Mott | 1930 | Obituary |
Muriel Shepherd | 1930 | Miss Muriel Shepherd (Associate Member) is study ing a t the College of Technology, Man– ch ester, in the evenings, whil e working in t h e Met er D epa rtmen t of Messrs. F erranti, Ltd . |
Muriel Watson | 1930 | |
MYFANWY REES | 1930 | |
N. Gibson | 1930 | |
N. W. Gibson (MInchin) | 1930 | Miss N. W . Gibson , B.Sc., Member , studied at Birmingham University and took her degree there in Physics, Chemistry and Mathematics. Her technical trainin g consisted of courses in Machine Drawing, Electrical Design and Electrical Laboratory Work at Rugby Technical School. She is now in charge of a section calculating A.C. Machine (chiefl y Induction Motor) characteristics from design data and test results at the British Thomson-Houston Works, Rugby. Mrs. Minchin. Left to get married. |
NANCY BIRD | 1930 | |
NETTA W. WILSON | 1930 | |
Newcomb | 1930 | |
Noel Minchin | 1930 | |
Nora E. Miller | 1930 | Mrs Palmer |
Nora Hewett | 1930 | |
O . K . S. Laugharne | 1930 | |
O.T. Wood | 1930 | |
Octavia Lewin | 1930 | |
Olga Platt | 1930 | Miss Olga Platt, B .Sc., B .Com., is Director and Secretary of th e firm of Isaiah Platt, Ltd., Bright Bolt and Nut Manufacturers, of vVednesbury. In thi s work she is sucoeeding her fa ther , th e late Mr . I saiah Platt, M.I.Mech .E ., who founded the fi rm. |
Olin | 1930 | |
Olive L . Sturt | 1930 | Miss Olive L . Sturt intends to take up engineer – ing as a career, a nd h as joined as a Graduate Member . |
P . M. C. Routh | 1930 | |
P. Kelly | 1930 | |
P. M. C. Routh | 1930 | Miss P. M. C. Routh, B.Sc.Lond. , Hons. in Chemistry, has had interesting experience with the Blue Funnel Line, for whom she was a metallurgist for 13t years, and has also been at the N.P.L . as a Junior Assistant in the Metallurgical Dept. Miss Routh is already a Member of the Institute of Metal s and of the Iron and Steel Institute. |
Paterson | 1930 | |
Pauline Durrant | 1930 | |
Peggy Salaman | 1930 | |
Phillips | 1930 | |
Phyllis A. M. Fawssett | 1930 | Miss , Graduate M ember, is studying Domestic Electricity at Chelsea Poly– technic, and is also attending the Simplified Engineering Course at the Borough Polytechnic, but hopes eventually to be apprenticed to Miss Partridge. |
Phyllis Deacon | Miss Phyllis Deacon, M.I.M.T., has taken over her late father 's business and is now the proprietor of Deacon's Garage , Mostyn Broad– way, Llandudno. She has r ecently been elected an Associate Member of the Institution of Brit+K709ish Engineer s. | |
Phyllis Evans | 1930 | |
D. A. E . Garrod | 1930 | |
R. King Everard | 1930 | |
R. S. Coombs | 1930 | |
Ragnhild Sergeliu | 1930 | |
Ray Clark | 1930 | |
Reed | 1930 | |
Rew | 1930 | |
Richard Humble | 1930 | |
Richardson | 1930 | Mrs. Richardson, elect ed an Associate of the Society, is the inventor of the Graph and Zonograph System of Radio Station Finding, and wa awarded the Gold Medal in the 1934 Exhibition of Inventions. Articles about her invention in Dec 1934 and June 1935) |
Rignor Kielland | 1930 | |
Romanne James | 1930 | |
Rosa Nouackh | 1930 | article about her work with radio technology in Austria |
Rosalind Norman | 1930 | |
Russell | 1930 | |
Ruth Levi | 1930 | Miss Ruth Levi, B.Se., Ph. D., has been ap– pointed a Junior Technical Assistant in the British Electrical and Allied Industries Re– search Association . |
Ruth S. Burns | 1930 | |
Ruth Young | 1930 | |
S. S. Thurston | 1930 | |
Sali Lobel | 1930 | |
SARAH DIXON | 1930 | |
Sarah Faraday (nee Barnard) | 1930 | |
Sarah Sheridan | 1930 | |
Savage | 1930 | |
Senator F. F. Plaminkova | 1930 | |
Senator P Laminkova | 1930 | |
Shelmerdine | 1930 | |
Signe Svensson | 1930 | |
Soddy | 1930 | |
Soman | 1930 | |
Sylvia Anthony | 1930 | |
Sylvia S . Warliker | 1930 | |
Taylor | 1930 | |
Teresa Zsigmondy | 1930 | |
THEODORA BOSANQUET | 1930 | |
Tilma Hainari | 1930 | Finnish temperance campaigner |
Van den Planck | 1930 | |
Vaughan | 1930 | |
Vera Bragina | 1930 | |
Vera Hjert | 1930 | Miss Vera Hjert, born in i 857, and a factoty in– spector trom 1903 to 1918, is the founder and superintendent of the Finnish Permanent State– supportect Exhibition for workers' Protection, founded in i909 , and re-named the Social Museum in 1S21. This exhibition contains every possible appliance and means for the prevention of accidents and disease connected with trade; it also includes a Children's Wel– fare Exhibition, and gives all information con– cerning Public Health . The number of visi– tors in 1930 exceeded 25 ,000. |
Viscountess Davidson | 1930 | |
Vivi Lonn | 1930 | |
W.F. Davison | 1930 | pic |
Wadsworth | 1930 | |
Walker | 1930 | |
Walker-Sinclair | 1930 | |
Westmoreland White | 1930 | |
Wiillis | 1930 | |
William Brown Meloney | 1930 | |
Wilson | 1930 | |
Wingfield | 1930 | |
Winifred Crossley | 1930 | |
Y. Wilson | 1930 | |
Yates Thompson | 1930 |
1940s
[edit]Name | Year | Notes |
---|---|---|
R. W. Bingham | 1940 | Pic |
Geoffrey Bowlby | 1940 | |
Jeannie Broad | 1940 | |
Ernest Brown | 1940 | |
Jeana J. Cadigan | 1940 | |
Margaret CORY | 1940 | |
I. Scott Elliott | 1940 | |
LILIAN M. FAITHFULL | 1940 | |
Winifred K. Farmer | 1940 | |
A. McN. Gordon | 1940 | |
Ayrton Gould | 1940 | |
Helen Graham | 1940 | |
K. E. M. G. Head | 1940 | |
F. M. Hitchcox | 1940 | |
E. H . Horniblow | 1940 | |
A. F. W. Johnson | 1940 | |
Amy Johnson (J. A. Mollison) | 1940 | |
H. Lawrence | 1940 | |
A. S. Lockhart | 1940 | |
E. M. Lowe | 1940 | |
PHYLLIS E. MoRRISON | 1940 | |
Ruth R. Nicholls | 1940 | |
Isobel Nicholson | 1940 | WES Courses in idustrial supervisory work for women engineers: 1940: The next course was in Glasgow, so far the only centre outside London . Its organisation was mainly the work of Miss I sobel Nicholson , Area Organiser for Scotland of the Electrical Association for Women , who selected twenty students from about one thousand applications. The training was given at the Stow College, School of Engineering, and it is hoped that another course will commence there shortly. |
Vera Norvick | 1940 | |
B. P. Park | 1940 | |
William Paterson | 1940 | Pic |
B . M. Power | 1940 | |
E. H. Pratt | 1940 | |
J . Quigley | 1940 | |
Elizabeth Scott | 1940 | |
Lesley Scott Souter | 1940 | |
G. Scott Stevenson | 1940 | |
G. F. Summers | 1940 | |
Lucy R. Upson | 1940 | |
Dorothy Vicaji | 1940 | |
Viscountess Rhondda | 1940 | |
A. C. G. Wright | 1940 | |
Mlle. E. Yanovskaya | 1940 | |
Dorothy Allhusen | 1941 | |
M. I. Anderson | 1941 | |
D. Annable | 1941 | |
Anscombe ( Sheila McGuffie) | 1941 | |
V. F. Archer | 1941 | |
P. J. Bain | 1941 | |
D. Beeston | 1941 | |
Beeston | 1941 | |
Bell-Wright, | 1941 | |
Benson | 1941 | |
Hon. Theodora Benson | 1941 | |
Stella H . Brown | 1941 | |
Hon. Victor Bruce | 1941 | |
J. Burchardt | 1941 | |
J. Calder | 1941 | |
J. N. Calder | 1941 | |
Alice C. Corns | 1941 | |
Countess of Limerick | 1941 | |
I. H. Cox | 1941 | |
J. A. Crawfurd | 1941 | |
C. de B. Stocks | 1941 | |
R. H. Dent | 1941 | Managing Director of Ardente Accoustic, Ltd., and Dire tor of Ardente, Ltd., and of LMK. Manufacturing Co. , Soientifi In trument Makers. |
Drysdale | 1941 | |
Walter Elliot | 1941 | |
O. Essex | 1941 | |
Ena Featherstone | 1941 | |
Forsdyke | 1941 | |
K. M. Garnham | 1941 | |
Margaret Gilruth | 1941 | |
M. Glazebrook | 1941 | |
E. M. Gosse | 1941 | |
Gregorowski | 1941 | |
C. E. Griffin | 1941 | |
F. D. F. Gyll | 1941 | |
Dorothy M. Halliley | 1941 | |
G. Hambling | 1941 | |
Dorothy Harper | 1941 | |
Harrison | 1941 | |
E. Harrison | 1941 | |
E. Herne | 1941 | |
E. H. Hill | 1941 | |
Hoven | 1941 | |
J. W . Johnson | 1941 | |
Trevor Jones | 1941 | |
L. M. Jones | 1941 | |
Maud Lady Warrender | 1941 | |
Evelyn M. Letemplier | 1941 | |
F. Lorraine-Hill | 1941 | |
F . Lorraine-Hill | 1941 | |
Beatrice Macdonald | 1941 | |
E . McClelland | 1941 | |
F. G. Miles | 1941 | Miss Maxine Forbes-Robertson |
Morgan | 1941 | |
Winston Neale | 1941 | |
D. Niklaus | 1941 | |
M. M. Nobbs | 1941 | |
Edith Nugus | 1941 | |
Oliver | 1941 | |
E. M. Overall | 1941 | |
J. Paterson | 1941 | |
J . W . Patterson | 1941 | |
Molly Quennell (Winston Neal) | 1941 | |
F. Reilly | 1941 | |
Ida Ricketts | 1941 | |
B . Rimmer | 1941 | |
B. Rimmer | 1941 | |
Audrey Sale Barker | 1941 | |
E. Scott-Picton | 1941 | |
S. Smyth | 1941 | |
L. G. B. Steel | 1941 | |
Mary E. Sutherland | 1941 | |
Sutton | 1941 | |
Suttons | 1941 | |
Madame Tible | 1941 | |
G. H. Tipper (nee Elam) | 1941 | |
L. R. Upson | 1941 | |
C. J. Wade | 1941 | |
M. D. Watkins | 1941 | |
Joyce Wedgwood | 1941 | women in BBC engineering dept |
Mary Anderson | 1942 | |
R. Bell–Wright | 1942 | |
Drexel Biddle | 1942 | |
EILEEN Bigland | 1942 | |
S. M. Denham Christie | 1942 | |
Georgiana Cooper | 1942 | |
A. M. Cox | 1942 | |
Eloise Davison | 1942 | |
Flora Dundas | 1942 | |
Olive Frank | 1942 | |
Phyllis Fry | 1942 | |
E. H. Gasking ( Batchelor) | 1942 | |
M. Henry | 1942 | |
Daisy Holland | 1942 | |
Gladys Hudson | 1942 | |
H. E. Sansam Iles | 1942 | |
Kenfield | 1942 | |
Krizan | 1942 | |
E . L. Lee | 1942 | |
Ellaline L. Lee | 1942 | |
B. Lloyd | 1942 | Amongst women appointed as Woman Power Officers are Dr. B. Lloyd, of t he Royal Technical ·college, Glasgow, designer of t he Roytex War Suit |
Madame Malkova | 1942 | |
Marjorie Murrell | 1942 | |
Madame Asya Nikolayeva | 1942 | |
Rachel Parsons | 1942 | |
Ester Pecsi | 1942 | |
C. D. Perreur-Lloyd | 1942 | |
S. Renny-Tailyour | 1942 | |
N. V. Rought | 1942 | |
Margaret Allingham Sale | 1942 | |
Ellen G. Schoendorff | 1942 | |
C. Shaw Scott | 1942 | |
K . M. Sterling | 1942 | |
Stockton | 1942 | |
E. Sutton | 1942 | |
Ada Bessie Swan | 1942 | |
C. R. Taylor | 1942 | |
L. G. B. Willson | 1942 | obit and pic |
ZOFIA WITORT | 1942 | |
Cecilia D. Wright | 1942 | |
K. Aspinall | 1943 | |
Sheila Barrett | 1943 | |
Lucy C. Barton | 1943 | |
G. F. Boss | 1943 | |
E. L. Bradshaw | 1943 | |
Brooks | 1943 | |
P. E. Burnham | 1943 | |
A. Calderbank | 1943 | |
Mary Maxwell CHANNELL | 1943 | |
C. Cheale | 1943 | |
A. Cook | 1943 | |
E. A. Cooke | 1943 | |
D. M. CRIDLAND | 1943 | brief biog paragraph |
M. Crispin | 1943 | |
S. F. Davies | 1943 | |
K. DE GUERIN | 1943 | |
E. H. Dunkley | 1943 | |
M. M. DUNNE | 1943 | |
Edkins-Thompson (R. Griffiths) | 1943 | |
W. M. Edwards | 1943 | |
F. M. L. Evans | 1943 | |
R. FARIS | 1943 | |
E. A. Fawcett | 1943 | |
T. Fitzpatrick | 1943 | |
Fitzpatrick | 1943 | |
O. Forbes | 1943 | |
Trefusis Forbes | 1943 | Air Commandant of the W.A.A.F . |
M. H. Foulkes | 1943 | |
F. Frail | 1943 | |
B. J. Froken Nanna | 1943 | |
D. M. Fry | 1943 | |
A. C. Goff | 1943 | |
D. M. GORSKY | 1943 | |
C. R. GUILD | 1943 | |
A. L. Hayes | 1943 | |
E. A. Heir | 1943 | |
E. HEY | 1943 | |
E. Hodgson | 1943 | |
M. Howorth | 1943 | |
F. HUGHES | 1943 | |
B. Jepsen | 1943 | |
A. Jones | 1943 | |
F. E. JONES | 1943 | |
E. T. B. KEANEY | 1943 | |
M. C. KinGWILL | 1943 | |
R. E. Laimbeer | 1943 | |
S. M. Lambert | 1943 | |
E. A. Lawson | 1943 | |
G. Lawson | 1943 | |
M. H. Lewis | 1943 | |
E. S. K. Liddell | 1943 | |
C. J. Long | 1943 | |
Lorraine-Hill | 1943 | |
E. Magall | 1943 | |
A. Mangnall | 1943 | |
F. E. Martin | 1943 | |
Dorothee Martin (nee Pullinger) | 1943 | Elected at 1st WES AGM to WES committee |
E. S. Laughton Mathews | 1943 | Director WRNS |
ROSE D. MEYER | 1943 | |
Mary W . K. Miller | 1943 | |
A. R. B. Moir | 1943 | |
C. MURIEL | 1943 | |
D. M. Owen | 1943 | |
A. PAGE | 1943 | |
D. T. Pitcher | 1943 | |
A. Pollitt | 1943 | |
K. F . PONTIN | 1943 | |
C. Popplewell | 1943 | |
E. E. Presant | 1943 | |
J. Price | 1943 | |
E. Pullen | 1943 | |
G. N. Purves | 1943 | |
D. Reed | 1943 | |
F . E. REILLY | 1943 | |
M. A. Reynolds | 1943 | |
A. Roberts | 1943 | |
J. H. R. Robinson | 1943 | Miss J. H. R. Robinson is an Aero Engineer employed by Airwork, Ltd. Miss Robinson was Apprentice Mechanic with the Strathtay Aero Club, and has been one year on machine shop work with Lumsden and Mackenzie. |
M. M. Robinson | 1943 | |
I. Scott Elliot | 1943 | |
G. M. SEARS | 1943 | |
M. E. Sharkey | 1943 | Miss M. E. Sharkey was trained at the Stow College, Glasgow, where she took the Forewomen's course. She is now engaged mainly on the Welfare and Canteen side with the Chloride Electrical Storage Co. , of Manchester. |
S. Shaw Scott | 1943 | |
J. E. M. Smith | 1943 | Miss J. E. M. SMITH, M.A. (Edinburgh), is a draughtsman at Ferranti, Ltd. |
S. M. Smith | 1943 | |
J . E. M. Smith | 1943 | |
S. Sprey-Smith | 1943 | |
Elise L. Sprott | 1943 | |
B. B. Stafford | 1943 | |
B. D. Stafford | 1943 | |
V. M. T. Stewart | 1943 | |
J. R. SUMNER | 1943 | |
Jack Tanner | 1943 | |
C. M. Thyne | 1943 | |
N. A. Tite | 1943 | |
B. M. Viney | 1943 | |
S. M. F. Waddell | 1943 | |
C. Whittaker | 1943 | |
A. Wilson | 1943 | |
W. Yewdall | 1943 | |
L. D. Anscombe | 1944 | |
K. Arthur | 1944 | |
D. Baldwin | 1944 | |
Beryl Barrett | 1944 | |
Mildred Bedford | 1944 | |
M. Bell | 1944 | |
M. R Bell | 1944 | |
M. E. Bell | 1944 | |
Bradnack | 1944 | |
B. Bridge | 1944 | |
S. Brooks | 1944 | In 1922 she became the first woman graduate to hold the_ degree of B.Sc. (Tech.) in Electrical Engineering of Manchester Uni– versity. |
E. A. Childs | 1944 | |
M. Conroy | 1944 | |
S. Constantine | 1944 | |
K. M. Cousins | 1944 | |
Hilda Crow | 1944 | |
Vera Davy | 1944 | |
Olive W. Dennis | 1944 | |
A. G. Dennistoun | 1944 | |
J. Dent | 1944 | |
M. V. M. Drake | 1944 | |
Rex Eaton | 1944 | |
M. H. Emtage | 1944 | |
A. E. Enstone | 1944 | works manager and partner in· the Holgate Engineering Co. which manufactures aeroplane parts and gun components. Mrs. Enstone was working in auto– mobile engineering before the war and she has had much experience in the workshops. |
F. B. Fairbrother | 1944 | |
Margaret Farrimond | 1944 | |
Helen Farstenfeld | 1944 | |
I. Joy Ferguson | 1944 | |
J. M Field | 1944 | |
J. M. W. Field | 1944 | |
J. M. Field | 1944 | |
A. M. Fitton | 1944 | |
V. F. Ford | 1944 | |
M. B. Fraser | 1944 | |
E. Freer | 1944 | |
J. E. Gardiner | 1944 | |
M. S. Gifford | 1944 | |
Margaret. Goldsmith | 1944 | |
C. Griffin | 1944 | |
E. M. Groom | 1944 | |
F. Hawley | 1944 | Doing fine metalwork at ICI metals |
F. E. Hilton | 1944 | |
E. K. Hodson | 1944 | |
E. Holmes | 1944 | Section Officer, W.A.A.F., has been engagedforsome time on the repair and salvaging of aircraft. She has been appointed Technical Adjutant to a unit, re– placing an R.A.F. Technical Engineer. |
M. F. Howell | 1944 | |
G. B. Hudson | 1944 | |
P. J. Hunt | 1944 | |
J. F. Jackson | 1944 | builder |
P. C. Jephson | 1944 | |
Dorothy Johnson | 1944 | |
E . Johnson | 1944 | |
D. M. Jones | 1944 | |
D. Keller | 1944 | |
M. D. Kenfield | 1944 | ventilating engineer |
Anne Kew | 1944 | |
G. M. Lait | 1944 | |
K. E. Lane | 1944 | |
D. S. K. Leighton | 1944 | |
G. Lerman | 1944 | |
Marian Liles | 1944 | |
Macaulay | 1944 | |
H. Macaulay | 1944 | |
K Macaulay | 1944 | |
M. E. MacDonald | 1944 | |
C. M. Martaki | 1944 | |
J. Martin Winn | 1944 | |
J. Mason | 1944 | |
N. Mawson | 1944 | |
McWmiams | 1944 | |
E. W. Metcalfe | 1944 | |
Frieda Miller | 1944 | |
H. B. Moullin | 1944 | |
D. J. W. Murray | 1944 | |
H. Nemrow | 1944 | |
Erika Neuhaus | 1944 | |
M. J. Newman | 1944 | |
N. Nixon | 1944 | |
F. Oakley | 1944 | |
A. M. Ogden | 1944 | |
Joyce Otterman | 1944 | Blyth, Northumberland, England. partner in her firm of orthopredic technicians and surgical and scientific instrument makers . She had spent some years in the shops, on the drafting of technical reports and in the prepara– ·t ion of drawings. WES5.18, 1944 Artificial arm United States Patent 2427974: This invention relates to artificial arms and has for its object to provide mechanism whereby an artificial hand or other appliance may be rapidly coupled to or detached from the arm without the use of the other hand. The invention is thus of particular value in cases of double amputation,. United States Patent 2477463 : This invention relates to artificial arms, for use in cases of amputation above the elbow, of the type comprising. an elbow joint operable by a flexion cord, wire or the like to flex the arm. The flexion cord, as is well known, is actuated by shoulder movement, chest movement or pedal movement... Artificial limb US 2482555 A 1946" |
P. I. Painting | 1944 | |
E. Peierls | 1944 | |
Maureen M. Perkins | 1944 | |
Lilian M. Pettifer | 1944 | |
D. L. Pile | 1944 | |
F. Pratt | 1944 | |
C. E. Richards | 1944 | |
B. G. Riley | 1944 | |
P. R. Ritchie | 1944 | |
D. E. Rock | 1944 | |
G. Roland | 1944 | |
W. Savage | 1944 | |
I. L. Scott Elliot | 1944 | |
L. Sexton | 1944 | |
B. Shearman | 1944 | |
U. J. Skelton | 1944 | |
D. Smith | 1944 | |
O. Stansfield (G. N. Leech) | 1944 | |
K. Steward | 1944 | |
M. S. Steward | 1944 | |
S. Stiefel | 1944 | |
M. C. M. Thyne | 1944 | |
M. C.M. Thyne | 1944 | |
E. S. Truman | 1944 | partner in the Truman Electrical Co. She is a member of the E.C.A. and has spent over twenty years in electrical contracting, engineering and retailing. |
Waddell | 1944 | |
E. P. Ward | 1944 | |
G. Watkinson | 1944 | |
H. D. Weaver | 1944 | |
L. A. Weaver | 1944 | |
E. M. Westcott | 1944 | |
Mabel Withers (M. Jones) | 1944 | may be artist |
B. H. Wright | 1944 | |
H. M. Yearn | XX | 1944 |
Ying Hsi Yuan | 1944 | visiting civ eng from china studied civil engineering at the Tsing Hua National University, Peiping, 1935-39, and practiced at the Bridge· Design Office, Ministry of Com– munications, China, 1939-41. She is now a post-graduate student at Liverpool University. |
N. S. Atkinson | 1942/3 | |
E. Blades | 1942/3 | |
I. S. Cox | 1942/3 | |
Y. de Ferranti | 1942/3 | |
Flight Officer EW Gilliam | 1942/3 | WAAF [In Flight mrs EW Gilliam A/cw2 becomes assistant section officer] [in airforce list as commissioned in April 1943, in signals], Squadron officer in 1942, but FO again in 1945. |
Vera Irzun | 1942/3 | Russia research engineer |
Helen Ostaeevich | 1942/3 | |
Dorothy A. Payne | 1942/3 | |
M. Sharp | 1942/3 | |
R. A. Siggers | 1942/3 | |
Nadya Zaitseva | 1942/3 | |
Klava Zhiltsova | 1942/3 | } |