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Changing women's lives: a biography of Dame Rosemary Murray - 54572

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Rosemary Murray (1913-2004) was the eldest of six children in a happy, talented and energetic family whose deeply-engrained attitude of service to the community she inherited.

She studied chemistry at Oxford, becoming one of the first women at LMH to achieve a DPhil. in science, and began an academic career as a lecturer at Royal Holloway College.

The charmed world of Rosemary's childhood and student days vanished abruptly with the outbreak of war.

Enlisting in the WRNS as a rating, she served from 1942- 46, attaining the rank of Chief Officer.

Post-war she was head-hunted by Cambridge University as Demonstrator in Chemistry combined with a Lectureship at Girton College.

Here she became interested in women's education, witnessing the success of the long battle to allow women to take degrees and becoming a committee member of the Third Foundation Association, a movement to set up a third women's college.

Eventually, when New Hall was started, she became its first Tutor-in-Charge, and later, President.

She went on to become the first woman Vice-Chancellor of Cambridge University.

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Product Details
Unicorn Press Ltd
191006534X / 9781910065341
eBook (Adobe Pdf, EPUB)
11/06/2014
England
English
342 pages
Copy: 10%; print: 10%
Derived record based on unviewed print version record.