women and girls in science

Professor Dame Kathleen Lonsdale

X-ray crystallographer / Pacifist

Kathleen Lonsdale by Adrienne Geoghegan

Kathleen Lonsdale by Adrienne Geoghegan

1903 - 1971

Kathleen Yardley was born in Co. Kildare in 1903, the youngest of ten children. Her Scottish mother and Irish father had an unhappy marriage; the family was wretchedly poor, four of the ten children died, and their postmaster father abused alcohol. By 1908, her parents separated, and Kathleen and her surviving siblings were brought to Essex by their mother.

Kathleen excelled through elementary and high school. She entered Bedford College, University of London aged 16, where she chose to read physics because, like Kay McNulty, she was worried that the only career open to women maths graduates was teaching–something she did not wish to do. In 1922, she achieved the highest grades in the BSc exams that had been seen at University of London for ten years and, as a result, was invited to join Nobel physicist Professor William Bragg’s research school. The post brought an income of £180 per year, with which Kathleen helped her family. She was the only woman in a group of international researchers. She collaborated with international scientists to produce the International Tablesor ‘crystallographer’s bible’, comprehensive tables for determining crystalstructure.

In 1927, Kathleen married Thomas Lonsdale. Contrary to her expectation that he might wish her to assume a traditional domestic role, he encouraged her to continue her scientific research. In 1929, she made her first major discovery, solving an important question that scientists had been arguing over for sixty years: she demonstrated conclusively that the benzene ring was flat. Her later contributions to science included important investigations into natural and synthetic diamonds.

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By 1931, Kathleen and Thomas had two children. She worked on calculations at home for a time, until Sir William Bragg intervened to secure her return to professional research by creating a position for her at the Royal Institution, including provision for childcare. She worked there for 15 years. In the 1940s, she gained the recognition she so richly reserved. In May 1945, she became one of the first two women elected Fellow of the Royal Society, 300 years after the Society’s foundation. A year later, she was appointed reader in crystallography at University College London, and in 1949, she became the first woman professor at the university. She was also the first woman president of the International Union of Crystallography.

Kathleen’s image illuminated the GPO during the 2020 Herstory Light Festival

Kathleen’s image illuminated the GPO during the 2020 Herstory Light Festival

During this time, she developed interests outside of the sciences. A Quaker by convincement, she conscientiously objected to registering for civil defence service during World War II and, refusing on principle to pay a fine of £2, she spent a month in Holloway Prison. Her husband later reflected that prison was the single most formative experience of her life, fostering a lifelong interest in penal reform. She became president of the Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom and published many articles on pacifism. Her 1957 book, Is Peace Possible? cites Martin Luther King’s non-violent civil rights movement, and–as co-founder of the Pugwash Movement and the Atomic Scientists’ Association–warns of the danger of nuclear weapons and the problems presented by the disposal of nuclear waste. She was a witty person. When, in 1966, a rare form of hexagonal diamond was named lonsdaleite in her honour, she wrote: ‘It makes me feel both proud and rather humble [...]the name seems appropriate since the mineral only occurs in very small quantities... and it is generally rather mixed up!’

Lonsdale made important scientific contributions, published prolifically, and worked tirelessly for humanitarian goals. She advocated for women in science, publishing instructions on the topic in 1970–her first piece of advice was to choose a supportive husband, as she had.

Sources:Dorothy M.C. Hodgkin, ‘Kathleen Lonsdale, 28 January 1903–1 April 1971,Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the Royal Society, 21 (Nov. 1975), 447–84; Peter Childs and Anne Mac Lellan, ‘The Stuff of Diamonds in Lab Coats and Lace,ed.Mary Mulvilhill (WITS, 2009), 145–155; Kathleen Lonsdale, ‘Is Peace Possible?’, in The Field Day Anthology of Irish Writing,ed.Angela Bourke (Cork University Press, 2002), IV, 648–52.

Research by Dr Angela Byrne, DFAT Historian-in-Residence at EPIC The Irish Emigration Museum. Featured in the exhibition 'Blazing a Trail: Lives and Legacies of Irish Diaspora Women', a collaboration between Herstory, EPIC The Irish Emigration Museum and the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade.

Mary Ward / Astronomer, Microscopist, Author & Artist

Naturalist / Astronomer / Microscopist / Author / Artist

Mary Ward by Adrienne Geoghegan

Mary Ward by Adrienne Geoghegan

Mary Ward (nee King) was born in 1827 to Henry King and Harriett Lloyd, in Ferbane, Co. Offaly. Growing up, as she did, in a well-to-do scientific family, Ward developed a great interest in nature. From a very young age, she started collecting insects and using her father’s magnifying glass to study and draw them in great detail.

Ward also had a keen interest in astronomy, and while she was growing up, her cousin, William Parsons, 3rd Earl of Rosse, built the world’s largest reflective telescope at Birr Castle (which remained the largest in the world for decades). Ward produced many sketches of the different stages of the construction, and these sketches were later used to help in the reconstruction of the telescope.  When she was a teenager, she was gifted her first microscope, probably one of the finest microscopes in Ireland at the time, and this became her life’s interest. She set about teaching herself all she could about microscopy.

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Most universities at this time did not accept women so Ward often wrote to various scientists, asking them for information on their published works in order to further her education. She was one of just three women on the mailing list for the Royal Astronomical Society at the time. Her first book Sketches with the Microscope was published in 1858 and has since been ranked as the ‘finest book printed in the county [Offaly] in the nineteenth century.’

Ward married Henry Ward in 1854 and together they had eight children. She was left with almost all of the domestic duties, so she often stayed up late at night to write up the results of her research. Over the course of her life she published further books and contributed her scientific illustrations to numerous articles and books.

The type of steam car Mary would have been travelling on

The type of steam car Mary would have been travelling on

Ward met a tragic death at the age of just 42 in 1869 when she fell from a steam-driven car and was crushed beneath it’s wheel. She was the first person in Ireland (and possibly the world) to be killed in a car accident. While many people know her for this alone, it is important that we remember her for her ground-breaking work in the field of science at a time when women were not expected to possess any kind of scientific ability and received very little education.

Sources:

 ‘Mary Ward,’ online at irishscientists.tripod.com, http://irishscientists.tripod.com/scientists/MARYWARD.HTM [accessed 24 Jan. 2020].

‘Irish scientist Mary Ward – the first person in the world to be killed by a car in 1869,’ The Irish Post, online at https://www.irishpost.com/news/mary-ward-irish-scientist-became-worlds-first-car-death-day-1869-99542 [accessed 23 Jan. 2020].

‘Microscopy,’ Birr Castle, online at https://birrcastle.com/microscopy/ [accessed 24 Jan. 2020].

McGreevy, Ronan, ‘Pioneering scientist and first road traffic fatality Mary Ward remembered,’ online at https://www.irishtimes.com/news/ireland/irish-news/pioneering-scientist-and-first-road-traffic-fatality-mary-ward-remembered-1.4004370 [accessed 23 Jan. 2020].

‘Celebrating the life and tragic death of Mary Ward,’ Offaly Independent, online at https://www.offalyindependent.ie/news/roundup/articles/2019/08/26/4178694-celebrating-the-life-and-tragic-death-of-mary-ward/ [accessed 24 Jan. 2020].

Macrory, Henry, ‘Mary Ward: Feminist famous as the first person to be killed in a car accident,’ Express, online at https://www.express.co.uk/life-style/life/1172582/mary-ward-feminist-killed-in-car-crash-anniversary-death [accessed 24 Jan. 2020].