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Mercy 'Cissy' Ashworth | |
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Born | Mercy Ashworth 1869 |
Died | 1943 |
Known for | One of the first women from Lincoln's Inn to be called to the bar. |
Mercy Ashworth (Born circa 1869)
Early life and education
[edit]Mercy, ‘Cissy’, was the daughter of a hat manufacturer and she was educated; initially at University College, Aberystwyth, and then between the years of 1895 and 1897 she read moral sciences at Girton. She then lectured for a few years at Homerton College, Cambridge. Later in her life in 1905, Mercy left for India where she then worked as a schools’ inspector, returning to London before the outbreak of war.
Work
[edit]She became an active member of the Women’s University Settlement in London. This was an organisation founded in the 1880s by among others Octavia Hill, the social reformer, and Helen Gladstone, the Prime Minister’s daughter. The idea was to encourage University-educated women to settle in deprived areas so they could help women and children by increasing educational and recreational opportunities for them through evening classes, clubs and Saturday school. Women lived rent-free in the settlement in return for the work they did. They also collaborated with nursing associations to improve health and sanitation. [1]
After being called to the bar Mercy had chambers in Lincoln’s Inn for many years and was listed on the south-eastern circuit. How much she practised is not clear. There is mention of her appearing in a landlord and tenant case (Trickebank v Brett 1934) but tracking how much of a practice a barrister had in those days is difficult. Interviewed at the time of her call by the Daily Chronicle, she said, ‘None of us knows yet what the future of women barristers is likely to be. It depends so much on the attitude of solicitors.’
References
[edit]- ^ "Mercy Ashworth | First 100 Years". first100years.org.uk. Retrieved 2018-06-12.