User:Dsp13/Englishwoman's Year Book
Appearance
Women Holding Appointments as Professors and Lecturers, 1914
From 'Women Holding Appointments as Professors and Lecturers', Englishwoman's Yearbook & Directory, 1914.[1], [2]
Arts
- Miss Ady, Tutor in History at St. Hugh's College.
- Miss Margaret Alford, Lecturer in Classics at Westfield College.
- Miss M. G. Beard , Lecturer in Medieval and Modern Languages at Girton College, Cambridge.
- Miss E. M. Blackburn, Assistant Mistress of Method at Leeds University.
- Miss Elsie Blackwell, Demonstrator in Botany at the University of Liverpool. Elizabeth Marianne Blackwell (1889-1973) was an English botanist. (See The Biographical Dictionary of Women in Science.)
- Miss K. S. Block / Katherine Salter Block. Lecturer in Medieval and Modern Languages at Royal Holloway College.
- Miss Augusta E. Rudmose Brown / Augusta Elizabeth Rudmose Brown, Assistant Lecturer in English Literature at the University of Aberdeen. Augusta Rudmose Brown (1881-1960) was the daughter of the Scottish explorer and botanist Robert Brown. Her younger brother was the botanist and explorer Robert Rudmose-Brown. She gained her MA in English from Aberdeen University in 1904. She taught for a year in Glasgow before returning to Aberdeen to be Assistant Lecturer to H. J. C. Grierson for five years. For a year she studied as a Carnegie scholar in London, researching the literary influence of Elizabethan drama, before being appointed lecturer in English at Stockwell Training College.[1]
- Miss C. M. Brown, Lecturer in Education at the University of Manchester. As Secretary of the Moral Education League (Which changed its name to the Civic and Moral Education League i 1919, and to the Civic Education League in 1920), she attended the New Ideals Conference in 1917.
- Hon. A. M. Bruce, Tutor in French at Somerville College, Oxford.
- Miss Mary Bryan (sic), Professor of Romance Languages at University College, Cork.
- Miss Sara A. Burstall, Special Lecturer in Education at the University of Manchester.
- Miss Clara E. Carpenter, Teacher of Education at Datchelor Training College. Clara Emily Carpenter (1868-1964) was educated at Mary Datchelor School, and her school diaries have been republished. (A Victorian schoolgirl's diary for 1884, ed. Iain T. Adamson). In 1914 she was one of the first women to be appointed a school inspector, and moved to Penrith. She retired in 1928, but remained in Penrith, sitting as a magistrate and governor of the grammar school. She was also president of the Penrith Literary Society.[2]
- Miss Cave-Browne-Cave, Assistant Lecturer in Mathematics at Girton College, Cambridge.
- Miss Dorothy Chapman, Assistant Lecturer in Latin at Liverpool University. Dorothy Chapman became Principal of Westfield College.[3]
- Miss Kate M. Clarke, Teacher of Education at Maria Grey Training College. Not sure if this is the same Kate M. Clarke who wrote on Devon antiquarian history: 'The conventual houses of Exeter and the neighbourhood', Devon Notes and Queries, Vol. 3, 1905, pp.129-151; on the Saxon font at St Marychurch, Devon Notes and Queries, January 1907; 'The Misericords of Exeter Cathedral', Transactions of the Devonshire Association, Vol. 39, 1907, pp.231-41; 'The Dolton font', Devon Notes and Queries, Vol. 5, 1908, pp.25-28; The Misericords of Exeter Cathedral. Part II', Transactions of the Devonshire Association, Vol. 40, 1908, pp.193-200; 'Records of St. Nicholas' Priory, Exeter', Transactions of the Devonshire Association, Vol. 44, 1912, pp.192-205; 'The Luppitt font', Devon and Cornwall Notes and Queries, Vol. 7, 1913, pp.201-5; 'The Baptismal Fonts of Devon. Part I', Transactions of the Devonshire Association, Vol. 45, 1913, pp.314-329; 'The Baptismal Fonts of Devon. Part II', Transactions of the Devonshire Association, Vol. 46, 1914, pp.428-436; 'The Baptismal Fonts of Devon. Part III', Transactions of the Devonshire Association, Vol. 47, 1915, pp.349-356; 'The Baptismal Fonts of Devon. Part IV', Transactions of the Devonshire Association, Vol. 48, 1916, pp.302-219; 'The Baptismal Fonts of Devon. Part V', Transactions of the Devonshire Association, Vol. 50, 1918, pp.583-588; 'The Baptismal Fonts of Devon. Part VI', Transactions of the Devonshire Association, Vol. 51, 1919, pp.211-221; 'The Baptismal Fonts of Devon. Part VII', Transactions of the Devonshire Association, Vol. 52, 1920, pp.327-335; 'The Baptismal Fonts of Devon. Part VIII', Transactions of the Devonshire Association, Vol. 53, 1921, pp.226-231; 'The Baptismal Fonts of Devon. Part IX', Transactions of the Devonshire Association, Vol. 54, 1922, pp.216-223; 'Carved Bench-Ends in Devon', Transactions of hte Exeter Diocesan Architectural and Archaeological Society, £rd series, Vol. 3, 1920. [3]
- Miss J. L. Coates, Teacher of German at Royal Holloway College. Jessica Lupton Coates / Jessie Lupton Coates (born 1877 or 1878). She was born in Birkenhead,[4] the daughter of William Henry Coates and Mary Lupton.[4]
- Miss Frances A. Collie. Teacher of Education at Liverpool University. She gained a degree at Oxford and studied in Leipzig and Jena in the late 1890s.[4] In 1905 Collie gained her MA from the University of Wales, with a thesis on 'The history and nature of the dowry among the ancient Greeks'.[5] She became headmistress of Aigburth Vale High School in 1908, and She later collaborated with the educationalist John Alfred Green on a translation of Henry Pestalozzi's educational writings, and published in the Journal of Experimental Pedagogy (now the British Journal of Educational Psychology.[5]. At Liverpool she was active in the British Federation of University Women.[6]
- Miss A. B. Collier, Lecturer in Mathematics at Newnham College.
- Miss M. W. Cooke / Margaret Wright Cooke / Margaret W. Cooke / Margaret Cooke, Assistant in English at Bedford College, London. Studied English at Bedford College, and graduated 1908 with a first class degree. 'Schiller's Robbers in England, 1788-1859', Modern Language Review, Vol. 11 (1915), pp. 156-172
- Miss Mary Covernton, Lecturer in English at King's College London.
- Mrs Crosland, Lecturer in French at Birkbeck College.
- Miss Maggie Dalrymple, Assistant Lecturer in Education at Aberystwyth University.
- Miss H. Darbishire, Tutor in English at Somerville College, Oxford.
- Mrs Rhys Davids, Lecturer in Philosophy at the University of Manchester.
- Miss A. H. Davies. Lecturer in Modern and Medieval Languages at Royal Holloway College.
- Miss Emily R. Daymond, Teacher of Music at the Royal College of Musicians.
- Miss Maria Degani Professor in Italian and Spanish at University College Dublin. Maria Degani was a graduate of the University of Padua. Her appointment by the Commission, instead of an Irish candidate, was controversial. Helena Walsh had been offered an Italian lectureship, before having the offer withdrawn for Degani to teach both Italian and Spanish.[7] The appointment provoked newspaper complaint and a hostile Monaghan County Council resolution.[8][9] Active in the Modern languages Association, Degani participated in an Italian Summer School held in 1919 at Girton College, Cambridge.[10] A Girton College, Cambridge research scholarship in Italian was established in Degani's memory.[11]
- Miss W. Elise Delp / Wilhelmine Elise Delp. Teacher of German at Royal Holloway College.
- Miss H. C. Deneke, Tutor in German at Lady Margaret Hall.
- Miss Henrietta Deutsch, Lecturer in Education at St Mary's Training College.
- Miss E. C. Dickenson, Assistant Lecturer in Education at the University of Manchester.
- Signorina Dobelli / Emma Bice Dobelli. Lecturer in Italian at Bedford College, London. The daughter of the journalist Ferdinando Dobelli, she moved to London in 1903. She created and headed the Italian department at Bedford College, A "major influence on Marion Cave", she gave help to Cave and the Italian antifascists. During World War II she worked for the Foreign Office as an Italy expert.[12] She translated G. M. Trevelyan's three-volume biography of Garibaldi. into Italian: [6]
- Miss Mary J. Donovan
- Miss B. Edgell
- Miss K. W. Farmer, Assistant Lecturer in History at Bedford College, London
- Mrs Fisher
- Miss K. Fitzgerald, Assistant Lecturer in Latin at Bedford College, London
- Miss Fortescue-Brickdale
- Miss A. Gardner
- Miss Doris Gunnell, Assistant Lecturer in French at Leeds University. Notes and letters of Doris Gunnell [7]
- Miss J. E. Harrison
- Miss C. F. E. Haslam, at Mary Datchelor Training College. Misprint for Katharine Sophia Haslam [8] ?
- Miss M. Hayden
- Miss M. Hayes-Robinson / M. W. Hayes Robinson / Margaret Hayes Robinson. Educated at St Hilda's College, Oxford, Margaret Hayes-Robinson gained a First in Modern History in 1898. She was appointed Vice-Principal and resident tutor at St Hugh's College, Oxford. She was also appointed librarian at St Hugh's, though only stayed there for one term.[13] She was head of the History Department at Royal Holloway College from 1899 to 1911. She was the model for a character, Miss Adam, in Ivy Compton-Burnett's debut novel, Dolores (1911).[14] She then became Tutor in History at Somerville College, Oxford. She was admired by Somerville students, including Vera Brittain. In 1916 she married Kenneth Leys, a Tutor at University College, Oxford, and they had a daughter.[15] She died in 1930, after being knocked down by a car When bicycling in Oxford.Cite error: A
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(see the help page). - Miss C. Herford
- Miss Ellen C. Higgins / Ellen Charlotte Higgins / Ellen Higgins (1871-1951) was an English mathematics teacher and college principal.[9]
- Miss M. E. D. Honey / Margaret Eva Duncan Honey. Gained her MA in French from Royal Holloway College for a thesis entitled 'Study of a French Manuscript, British Museum Additional 10289: Titus et Vespasian'.[16]
- Miss Emily G. Ingram Graduated from Royal Holloway College in 1908. Lecturer in English at East London College. In 1931 she became a Senior Lecturer at King's College London.[10]
- Miss E. Jebb
- Miss K. Jex-Blake
- Miss F. C. Johnson / Fanny Cecilia Johnson, Bedford College for Women. Graduated in French from London Univerwsity in 1899,[17] (Not to be confused with Fanny Eliza Johnson.)
- Miss Katherine L. Johnstone, Lecturer in Classics, Maria Grey College
- Miss Hilda Johnstone
- Miss Mary E. Monckton / Mary Evelyn Monckton / Mary Evelyn Monckton-Jones (died 1948), Tutor in History, Liverpool
- Miss E. F. Jourdain
- Miss J. E. Kennedy. Lecturer in Anglo-Saxon at Girton College.
- Miss Amy Kimpster. Assistant Lecturer in Education at University College of Wales, Aberystwyth.
- Miss Kirchberger. Assistant Lecturer in Medieval and Modern Languages, Girton College.
- Mrs. Knowles. Reader in History, University of London.
- Miss M. M. Lane. Lecturer in English at University College, Bangor.
- Miss Margaret L. Lee. Lecturer in English at King's College London. Margaret Lucy Lee (1871-1955), headmistress. In ODNB.
- Mlle Lefevre. Lecturer in French at Newnham College.
- Miss A. E. Levett. Tutor in Modern History at St. Hilda's Hall, Oxford.
- Miss Anna L. Littleboy. Teacher of English at Northampton Polytechnic.
- Miss E. C. Lodge. Tutor in History at Lady Margaret Hall.
- Miss Marjorie Long. Assistant Lecturer in Mathematics at Bedford College, London. Marjorie J. Long (born 1886) was an Irish mathematician. [11]
- Miss H. Lorimer. Tutor in Classics at Somerville College.
- Miss Elizabeth Macadam. Lecturer in Economic Science at Liverpool University.
- Miss E. A. MacArthur. Lecturer in Arts at Queen's, Belfast.
- Miss K. K. MacCutcheon. Tutor in Classics at Lady Margaret Hall. Later lectured in Classics at University College Reading, job-sharing with Annie Ure.
- Miss Eleanor MacDougall. Lecturer in Classics at Westfield College.
- Mrs. Macken. Professor of German at University College, Dublin. Mary M. Macken (?-?) was the first Professor of German at University College, Dublin.[18]
- Mrs. H. M. Mackenzie. Professor of Education at University College, Cardiff.
- Miss Dora Mason. Assistant Lecturer in Classics at Westfield College. Dora Mason (1882-1978) was an English lecturer, suffragist and doctor.[19] [12]
- Miss Constance E. Maxwell. Assistant Professor in Modern History at Trinity College, Dublin.
- Miss Maude May. Tutor in Arts at Queen Margaret College, Glasgow.
- Miss Sara Melhuish. Head of Training Department, Bedford College, London.
- Miss M. A. Meyer (sic). Lecturer in Mathematics at Girton College.
- Miss Marie Michaelis. Teacher in Education at Maria Grey Training College. Marie Michaelis (born 1873). The daughter of Emilie Michaelis (1834–1904), the First Principal of Froebel College. [13] [14]
- Miss Edith Julia Morley. Lecturer in English at King's College, London.
- Miss Hilda Murray. Teacher in English and Germanic Philology at Royal Holloway College. Hilda Murray / Hilda Mary Emily Ada Ruthven Murray (1875–1951), philologist and literary scholar. In ODNB.
- Miss Adelaide M. Nicholson. Teacher in Education at Maria Grey Training College. Adelaide Margaret Nicholson (1867-1934). [15]
- Miss Hilda D. Oakeley. Lecturer in Philosophy at King's College for Women.
- Miss Agnes O'Farrelly. Lecturer in Irish Language at University College, Dublin.
- Mlle Orliac. Assistant in French, Bedford College, London. Marie d'Orliac, later Marie Bohn (?-?). She helped to establish the IFRU.[20] [21]
- Miss Grace Owen. Assistant Lecturer in Education at University College, Reading. Grace Owen (1873-1965) [16]
- Miss Mina Paquier. Teacher of French at Royal Holloway College. (Charlotte) Mina Perry, née Paquier. [17]
- Miss C. E. Parker. Lecturer in CLassics at Westfield College.
- Miss Ethel Parry. Assistant Mistress of Method at Leeds University.
- Miss A. Paterson. Assistant Lecturer in Education at University College, Bangor.
- Miss A. C. Paues. Lecturer in Modern Languages at Newnham College.
- Miss M. A. Pechinet. Teacher of French at Royal Holloway College. Marie Pechinet (1850?-1912).[14]
- Miss M. Pope. Tutor in French at Somerville College.
- Miss Helena L. Powell. Lecturer in Education at St Mary's College, Paddington.[18]
- Miss E. E. Power. Lecturer in History and Economics at Girton College.
- Miss Margaret Punnett. Teacher of Education at London Day Training College. Margaret Punnett (1867-1946) was an English educator and mathematician.
- Miss O. Purser. Assistant Professor of English Literature at Trinity College, Dublin.
- Miss Agnes M. Ramsay. Lecturer in Classics at Westfield College. Agnes M. Ramsay. Daughter of Agnes Ramsay and William Mitchell Ramsay.
- Miss Rachel R. Reid. Lecturer in History at University College, London.
- Miss A. W. Richardson. Lecturer in Classics at Westfield College. Anne Wakefield Richardson (1859-1942) [19]
- Miss Caroline E. Riggs. Lecturer in Education at Datchelor Training College.
- Miss Hannah Robertson. Mistress of Method at Leeds University.
- Miss Rogers. Tutor in Classics at St. Hugh's College
- Miss Mary Ryan. Professor of Romance Languages at University College, Cork.
- Miss Ida Beata Sachs. Lecturer in the Training Department at Maria Grey Training College. Ida Beata Saxby, born Ida Beata Sachs (1883−1949) was a English psychologist.[22]
- Miss Alice Sargeant. Teacher of History at Westfield College. Alice Sergeant. Eventually became inspector of schools in India. [20]
- Miss M. Seaton. Lecturer in Medieval and Modern Languages at Girton College.
- Miss Phoebe Sheavyn. Special Lecturer in English Language and Literature at Manchester University. Phoebe Sheavyn / Phoebe Ann Beale Sheavyn (1865-1968). In ODNB.
- Miss F. R. Shields. Assistant Lecturer in Philosophy at Bedford College, London.
- Miss Rose Sidgwick. Lecturer in History at Birmingham University.
- Miss Caroline A. G. Skeel. Lecturer in History at Westfield College.
- Miss M. Steele Smith. Lecturer in Modern Languages at Newnham College. Minna Steele Smith (1869-1952). [21]
- Miss Ethel H. Spalding. Teacher in History at Westfield College. Ethel Howard Spalding. Studied at Oxford University. [22]
- Miss Spens. Tutor in English at Lady Margaret Hall.
- Miss C. F. E. Spurgeon. Professor of English at London University.
- Miss J. P. Strachey. Lecturer in Modern Languages at Newnham College.
- Miss E. Strudwick. Lecturer in Latin at Bedford College, London.
- Miss W. Sweitz. Professor of German at University College, Cork.
- Miss D. Tarrant. Lecturer in Classics at Bedford College, London.
- Miss M. E. B. Taylor (sic). Lecturer in Classics at Royal Holloway College. Margaret Elizabeth Jane Taylor (1870-1964) was an English classicist.[23] [23]
- Miss N. G. R. Taylor. Lecturer in Education at St. Mary's College, Paddington. Nina Georgine Rimington Taylor (1876-1951). [24]
- Miss E. M. Thomas. Tutor in German at St. Hugh's College.
- Mrs Thompson. Lecturer in Mathematics at Newnham College.
- Miss Louisa F. Todd. Tutor in English at St. Hilda's Hall. Louisa Fentham Todd, later Mrs Bradbury. Librarian at Hilda's Hall.
- Miss Mary Agnes Trimen. Teacher of English at Northampton Polytechnic. Mary Agnes Trimen (28 January 1876 – 14 January 1945). [25]
- Miss M. J. Tuke. Lecturer in French and Romance Philology at Bedford College, London. Margaret Tuke
- Miss Edith M. Ward. Tutor in Geography at Liverpool University. Edith Majorie Ward. See http://gfgrg.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2010/08/Maddrell.pdf for a bunch of women geographers. J. E. Allison 'Miss Edith Marjorie Ward', Geography, 40: 279.
- Miss Wardale. Tutor in English at St. Hugh's College. Edith Elizabeth Wardale (1863-1943), in ODNB
- Miss K. N. Warren. Lecturer in English Language and Literature at Westfield College. Kate Mary Warren (1850-1950). Contributor to the Catholic Encyclopedia.
- Mrs Wedd. Lecturer in Classics at Newnham College. Rachel Evelyn Wedd, nee White (1867-1943). [26]
- Miss Alice Werner. Lecturer in African Languages at King's College, London.
- Miss Mary Williams. Lecturer in French at King's College for Women.
- Miss Lilian Winstanley. Assistant Lecturer in English at University College of Wales, Aberystwyth.
- Miss Helen M. Wodehouse. Lecturer in Political Economy at Birmingham University.
- Miss Sybil Wragge. Lecturer in English Language at Armstrong College, Durham.
Science
Science, 1900
From The Englishwoman's Year Book, 1900, pp.119ff
- Astronomers
- Miss E. Brown (died 1899), Director of the Solar Section of the British Astronomical Association
- Miss Agnes Clerke
- Mrs. Fleming at Harvard College Observatory
- Lady Huggins, collaborator with Sir William Huggins
- Miss Dorothea Klumpke
- Miss Sarah F. Whiteing
- Biologists
- Miss Ethel Barton
- Miss Mary Beeton (1876-1966).[24]
- Mrs H. M. Bernard
- Miss Edith M. Brace
- Miss Florence Buchanan
- Miss Edith Chick (1869-1970).[25]
- Miss Dale
- Miss Maria Dawson.[26] Became a biology teacher at the Cambridge and County School for Boys, where she taught Frederick Wallace Edwards.[27]
- Miss J. Gowan / Jane Gowan. Collaborated with Albert Seward.[28]
- Miss Isa L. Hiles
- Miss Agnes Kelly
- Mrs Agnes Kenyon. Melbourne conchologist.[29][30]
- Miss Alice Lee
- Miss Eleanor A. Ormerod
- Miss D. F. M. Pertz
- Miss E. G. Philipps. Elinor Gladys Philipps (1872-1965).
- Miss Ethel Sargant
- Miss Cora B. Saunders
- Miss A. L. Smith
- Miss Theodora Smith
- Miss S. C. M. Sowton
- Lilian J. Veley / Miss Lilian Gould
- Miss M. A. Whiteley
- Miss Wright
- Miss Notley
- Chemistry
- Miss Harriette Chick
- Miss Winifred Esther Walker
- Miss Mildred Gostling
- Miss L. Hall
- Miss Humphrey
- Miss Edna Walter
- Mrs Bryant
- Geology
- Physics
- History, Archaeology, and Economic Science
- Miss Mary Bateson
- Miss Margaret Benson
- Miss Janet Gourlay
- Miss Clara Collet
- Mrs. Collier
- Mrs. Day
- Miss F. Hermia Durham
- Miss E. R. Faraday
- Miss Hewart
- Mrs. Pears
- Miss Russell
- Hygiene
- Miss Mary Dendy
- Miss Edith Johnson
- Miss C. A. Smith
- Miss Bell
- Mrs. Redford
- Mrs. S. A. Jones
- Miss Edith Escombe
- Miss Blanche Gardiner
- Miss B. Hall
- Miss Mabel Proctor
- Miss C. J. Wood
- Miss Wadmore
- Miss Alice Ravenhill
- Travel
- Mrs. Isabella Bishop
- Mrs. Edgeworth David
- Miss Kingsley
- Mrs. Archibald Little
- Mrs. Norman Neruda
- Mrs. W. R. Rickmers
- Women Science Lecturers and Demonstrators
References
- ^ Aberdeen University Review, Vol. II, 1914-15.
- ^ Penrith woman's teenage diary of Victorian days, Cumberland and Westmorland Herald, 5 May 2001.
- ^ Dorothy Chapman, Principal of Westfield College 1931-1939, Women at Queen Mary Online. Accessed 6 January 2019.
- ^ a b Aigburth Vale High School, Liverpool Schools.
- ^ British History Online
- ^ Carol Dyhouse (17 September 2016). No Distinction Of Sex?: Women In British Universities, 1870-1939. Taylor & Francis. pp. 200–. ISBN 978-1-134-22297-1.
- ^ N. Smith (2006). A 'Manly Study'?: Irish Women Historians 1868-1949. Palgrave Macmillan UK. p. 196. ISBN 978-0-230-59648-1.
- ^ John Walsh (2018). Higher Education in Ireland, 1922–2016: Politics, Policy and Power—A History of Higher Education in the Irish State. Springer. p. 20. ISBN 978-1-137-44673-2.
- ^ The Degani Appointment: Convocation Calls for Explanation', Report of Convocation of National University, 28 April 1910.
- ^ 'The Italian Summer School at Girton', The Spectator, 27 September 1919.
- ^ University of Cambridge (1966). Register. p. 567.
- ^ Isabelle Richet (2018). Women, Antifascism and Mussolini’s Italy: The Life of Marion Cave Rosselli. Bloomsbury Publishing. pp. 35, 363. ISBN 978-1-78672-525-7.
- ^ St Hugh's College Library 1886-2011
- ^ a b M.C. Rintoul (2014). Dictionary of Real People and Places in Fiction. Taylor & Francis. p. 19. ISBN 978-1-136-11940-8. Cite error: The named reference "Rintoul2014" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
- ^ 'The Rev. K K. M. Leys', The Times, 22 June 1950.
- ^ Janet Horowitz Murray; Myra Stark, ed. (2017). The Englishwoman's Review of Social and Industrial Questions: 1907-1908. Taylor & Francis. pp. 295–6. ISBN 978-1-315-39504-3.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: editors list (link) - ^ 'University Intelligence', The Times, 5 Jan 1899, p.8.
- ^ Judith Harford (2010). Have Women Made a Difference?: Women in Irish Universities, 1850-2010. Peter Lang. pp. 26–. ISBN 978-3-0343-0116-9.
- ^ Elizabeth Crawford (2003). The Women's Suffrage Movement: A Reference Guide 1866-1928. Routledge. pp. 1092–. ISBN 1-135-43401-8.
- ^ Michel Rapoport, [www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctv512xmz.19 The London French from the Belle Epoque to the end of the inter-war period], in Debra Kelly & Martyn Cornick, eds., A history of the French in London, pp.262-3.
- ^ Charlotte Faucher & Philippe Lane, French cultural diplomacy in early twentieth-centuryLondon, in Debra Kelly & Martyn Cornick, eds., A history of the French in London, pp.281-98
- ^ Elizabeth Valentine, 'Ida Beata Saxby (formerly Sachs) (1883−1949)'.In Horst Gundlach et al, eds., European Pioneer Women in Psychology, 2010, pp.159-72.
- ^ M.C. Rintoul (2014). Dictionary of Real People and Places in Fiction. Routledge. p. 883. ISBN 978-1-136-11932-3.
- ^ Mary R.S. Creese (2000). Ladies in the Laboratory? American and British Women in Science, 1800-1900: A Survey of Their Contributions to Research. Scarecrow Press. p. 209. ISBN 978-0-585-27684-7.
- ^ Mary R.S. Creese (2000). Ladies in the Laboratory? American and British Women in Science, 1800-1900: A Survey of Their Contributions to Research. Scarecrow Press. pp. 40–1. ISBN 978-0-585-27684-7.
- ^ Janet Horowitz Murray; Myra Stark (2016). The Englishwoman's Review of Social and Industrial Questions: 1897. Taylor & Francis. p. 109. ISBN 978-1-315-39652-1.
- ^ Augustus Daniel Imms, Frederick Wallace Edwards, 1888-1940, Biographical Memoirs of Members of the Royal Society, Vol 3, Issue 10 (December 1941).
- ^ Mary R.S. Creese (2000). Ladies in the Laboratory? American and British Women in Science, 1800-1900: A Survey of Their Contributions to Research. Scarecrow Press. p. 61. ISBN 978-0-585-27684-7.
- ^ Brian Saunders (2012). Discovery of Australia's Fishes: A History of Australian Ichthyology to 1930. Csiro Publishing. p. 165. ISBN 978-0-643-10672-7.
- ^ Mary R. S. Creese; Thomas M. Creese (2010). Ladies in the Laboratory III: South African, Australian, New Zealand, and Canadian Women in Science: Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Centuries. Scarecrow Press. p. 54. ISBN 978-0-8108-7289-9.