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#151

Post by johnpcapitalist »

Foggy wrote: Fri Aug 30, 2024 10:48 am Not a particular lady, but quite a few of them ...
In a milestone breakthrough, more than half of Caltech’s incoming undergraduate class in the fall will be women for the first time in its 133-year history. The class of 113 women and 109 men comes 50 years after Caltech graduated its first class of undergraduate women, who were admitted in 1970. Source: LA Times
I was just gonna say that my dad, Caltech class of '54, had zero women in his class.

I have read several times that if colleges were completely gender-blind on admissions, most selective universities would have classes of 70%-plus females because male achievements are dropping in all areas, but colleges know they can't attract desirable female candidates if they don't have a roughly 50-50 mix of males to females.

It'll be interesting to see how long it takes for the Republicans to notice that if they eliminate all forms of affirmative action, that it will backfire in the worst possible way for the patriarchy: the males they're trying so desperately to protect will actually end up worse off.

Incidentally, if you consider "affirmative action" to include legacies (kids of alumni), a key mechanism for perpetuating the power of incompetent white males, then it will imperil the Ivy League admission status of sons of privilege. I had read that at one point, 40% of Harvard students were legacies and only 60% were admitted on ability.
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#152

Post by Volkonski »

1970?

My alma mater graduated its first woman in 1873 and began admitting women on an equal basis with men in all areas of study in 1882.
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#153

Post by chancery »

Longstanding rivalry between CIT & MIT.
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#154

Post by Mrich »

My dad went to Vanderbilt (class of '53); he was a mechanical engineer and he said there was one woman in his class. She was not able to participate in their "field trips" because "it wouldn't look good." He said she was whip smart but ended up working in her father's hardware business.

I had no idea the Caltech enrollment was so small!
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#155

Post by Suranis »

From The History page on Facebook
Mary Walton, a pioneering inventor from the 19th century, transformed urban life with her groundbreaking work. In 1879, she patented a device that forced smoke from industrial smokestacks into water tanks, dramatically reducing air pollution in cities choking under toxic fumes. This innovation not only improved air quality but also marked a significant advancement in environmental awareness during the Industrial Revolution. Walton's contributions extended beyond this, as she developed noise reduction systems for New York's elevated trains, making urban life more bearable. Mary Walton paved the way for modern environmental innovation, showcasing the power of creativity and determination in tackling pollution.
wiki page

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mary_Walton
Mary Elizabeth Walton was a nineteenth-century American inventor who was awarded two patents for pollution-reducing devices. In 1881, Walton created a method for reducing the environmental hazards of the smoke emitted from locomotive, industrial and residential chimneys. Her system deflected the emissions being produced by factory smokestacks into water tanks, where the pollutants were retained and later flushed "into the sewer, or into other suitable channels for conducting them to a distant or any desired locality". This water tank system redirected smoke, odors, and pollutants away from the city and out of the air before society had even come to a true understanding of the problem. The extent of the problem known was a dark cloud that hung in the air and an unpleasant odor, yet Walton inadvertently also helped to reduce air pollution and cancer-causing coal smoke.

Mary Walton also invented a system for reducing the noise produced by the elevated railway systems that were rapidly expanding in New York City, where she lived near the Sixth Avenue Line. Walton had chosen to pursue a solution after hearing that young Thomas Edison had tried and failed. After experimentation and research, she was able to narrow down that much of the sound was a result of amplification from wooden support boxes. To test various solutions, she built a model of the tracks in her basement. From these tests, she determined that lining the boxes with cotton and filling them with sand served to effectively dampen the sound of the trains. Her system deadened the noise caused by trains running over the tracks by cradling the tracks in a wooden box lined with cotton and filled with sand. The rights to her invention, patented in 1881, were sold to the Metropolitan Railroad for $10,000 and the system was soon adopted by other elevated railway companies. Her idea of using sand to dampen sound pollution in New York was inspired by the use of sand to dampen the clanging of anvils near her home. Mary Walton was a true innovator, noticing and experiencing problems in her life and targeting that as a way to make the world a better place.
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#156

Post by RTH10260 »

some pictures in the article
How a little-known 17th-century female scientist changed our understanding of insects
Maria Sibylla Merian’s beautiful and disturbing illustrations, which shaped how we look at the natural world, will be on show at Amsterdam’s Rijksmuseum

Jennifer Rankin
Sun 1 Sep 2024 11.00 CEST

More than three centuries after she made a perilous transatlantic voyage to study butterflies, a rare copy of the hand-coloured masterwork by the great naturalist and artist Maria Sibylla Merian is returning to Amsterdam.

The Rijksmuseum, which holds more than half-a-million books on art and history, last week announced it had acquired a rare first-edition copy of Metamorphosis of the Insects of Suriname (Metamorphosis Insectorum Surinamensium), described as a high point of 18th-century book production when the Dutch Republic was “the bookshop of the world”.

More than half-a-metre tall and illustrated with 60 richly coloured plates, Metamorphosis revealed to a wider public the transformation of tropical insects from egg to adult.

Merian and her daughters produced about 200 copies from 1705, but today only an estimated 67 remain, and few with colour illustrations.


more at https://www.theguardian.com/environment ... useum-show
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#157

Post by keith »

Huh.

Jennifer Rankin musta read post number 16 in this very thread!
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#158

Post by Suranis »

https://www.ctie.monash.edu.au/hargrave/berg.html
Edith, (Mrs. Hart O.) Berg
http://www.nasm.si.edu

When Mrs. Hart O. Berg watched Wilbur Wright demonstrate the Wright Flyer at Le Mans, France, she was so thrilled by the performance that she asked Wilbur for a ride.

Thus, in September 1908, she became the first American woman to fly as a passenger in an airplane, soaring for two minutes and seven seconds.

Seated in the right seat of the aircraft, she tied a rope securely around her skirt at her ankles to keep it from blowing in the wind during the flight.

A French fashion designer watching the flight was impressed with the way Mrs. Berg walked away from the aircraft with her skirt still tied. Mrs. Berg was then credited with inspiring the famous "Hobble Skirt" fashion.
Edith Berg with Wilbur Wright
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#159

Post by Suranis »

From Facebook
Wipers Did you know that the windshield wiper, a crucial feature in modern cars, was invented by a woman named Mary Anderson?

Born on an Alabama plantation in 1866, Mary was a real estate developer, rancher, and inventor who made history with her innovative idea. In 1902, during a snowy day in New York City, Mary rode a trolley and watched as the driver struggled to see through the icy windshield. She designed a spring-loaded lever with a rubber blade that allowed drivers to clean their view from inside the vehicle. Patented in 1903, her invention laid the foundation for windshield wipers as we know them today. Despite her groundbreaking work, Mary never profited from her invention. By the time windshield wipers became standard in cars, her patent had expired. Yet, today they are essential in safe driving, highlighting the vital role of creativity and perseverance.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mary_Anderson_(inventor)
Her Invention (windshield wipers)

In 1902,[6] she visited to New York City in the winter. Anderson sat in a trolley car on a frosty day. Anderson observed that the trolley car driver struggled to see past the windows because of the falling sleet. The trolley car’s front window was designed for bad-weather visibility, but its multi-pane windshield system worked very poorly. Therefore, to clear the sights, the driver needed to open the window, lean out of the vehicle, or stop the car to go outside in order to wipe the windscreen with his or her hands. Anderson, who was not an engineer but an entrepreneur, identified the problem and its opportunity. She envisioned a windshield wiper blade that the trolley driver could operate from the inside. At that time, it rarely occurred to anyone else to eliminate the problem. It was something drivers simply accepted and dealt with.[7][8]

When she returned to Alabama, she drew up a sketch for a wiper blade that could be operated from inside a vehicle and wrote up the description. She also hired a designer for a hand-operated device to keep a windshield clear and had a local company produce a working model. Her device consisted of a lever inside the vehicle that controlled a rubber blade on the outside of the windshield. The lever could be operated to cause the spring-loaded arm to move back and forth across the windshield. A counterweight was used to ensure contact between the wiper and the window. The device could be easily removed if desired after the winter was over. Similar devices had been made earlier, but Anderson's was the first windshield clearing device to be effective. Anderson’s simple mechanism and basic design have remained much the same, but unlike today’s windscreen wipers, Anderson’s could be removed when not needed.[9][8]

She then applied for, and in 1903 was granted, a 17-year patent for a windshield wiper. The patent application was filed on June 18, 1903. On November 10, 1903, the United States Patent Office awarded Anderson patent number 743,801 for her Window Cleaning device.[6][1]

In 1903 when Anderson applied for the patent, cars were not very popular. Henry Ford’s Model A automobile had not been manufactured yet. Therefore, when Anderson tried to sell the rights to her invention through a noted Canadian firm of Dinning and Eckenstein in 1905, they rejected her application. They argued, "we do not consider it to be of such commercial value as would warrant our undertaking its sale." Furthermore, many could not see the value of her invention and stressed the risk that the driver would be distracted by operating the device and the moving wipers.[9]

By 1913, the automobile manufacturing business had grown exponentially and windshield wipers were standard equipment.[9] In 1922, Cadillac became the first car manufacturer to adopt them as standard equipment.[8] However, Anderson never profited from her invention or was given an recognition.[6] Giving up on partnering with companies to manufacture her invention, the patent expiring in 1920.[10][1] According to the National Inventors Hall of Fame, her invention was simply ahead of its time, and other companies and entrepreneurs were able to profit off her original ideas.[10]

In 1917, Charlotte Bridgewood patented the “electric storm windshield cleaner,” the first automatic wiper system that used rollers instead of blades.[11][12] Like Anderson, Bridgewood never made any money from her invention. Sara-Scott Wingo, rector of Emmanuel Episcopal Church in Richmond, Va., and Anderson’s great-great niece suspect Anderson’s invention never went anywhere because Anderson was an independent woman. Wingo said in an interview with NPR News, “She didn't have a father. She didn't have a husband. And the world was kind of run by men back then.”
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#160

Post by Suranis »

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ng%C4%81_ ... te_P%C5%8D
Ngā Wai Hono i te Pō (born 13 January 1997) is the Māori Queen. She was raised to the throne on 5 September 2024, being elected to succeed her father Kīngi Tūheitia. Her full name and title is Te Arikinui Kuīni Ngā Wai Hono i te Pō.[4] Her titles Te Arikinui (meaning Paramount Chief) and Kuīni (meaning Queen) were bestowed when she became monarch. The youngest child and only daughter of Tūheitia, she is a direct descendant of the first Māori King, Pōtatau Te Wherowhero, who was installed in 1858. She is the eighth monarch of the Kīngitanga, and the second woman to hold the position.

Ngā Wai Hono i te Pō was born into the Kīngitanga royal family during the reign of her paternal grandmother Te Arikinui Dame Te Atairangikaahu. She is the youngest child of Kīngi Tūheitia Pōtatau Te Wherowhero VII and Makau Ariki Atawhai Paki. Her early life was steeped in the cultural and spiritual practices of the Māori people, with a particular focus on the traditions of the Kīngitanga movement.

In 2024, following the death of her father, Ngā Wai Hono i te Pō was selected as the Māori Queen by the Tekau-mā-rua. Her coronation took place at Tūrangawaewae Marae, the seat of the Kīngitanga, in a ceremony attended by leaders and dignitaries from across the country and the Pacific. Her accession was seen as a continuation of the Kīngitanga's mission to unify Māori people and to protect their rights.

:snippity:

Early career

Ngā Wai Hono i te Pō role within the Kīngitanga became more prominent in her early twenties as she began to represent her father at cultural and political events. In 2022 she met with then-Prince Charles in London.[8] She was involved in governance roles, such as serving on the Waitangi National Trust Board, which she was appointed to in 2020.[3]

Accession and reign

Ngā Wai Hono i te Pō acceded to the throne at the age of 27, the second-youngest to do so.[8] Her accession was not automatic, as the Māori monarchy is not strictly hereditary.[8] However, her growing prominence in recent years, including her participation in official engagements and representation of Māori interests, positioned her as a strong candidate. Upon her accession, she was younger than the youngest reigning monarch of a sovereign nation (Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani, the sovereign Emir of Qatar).[4]

Tūheitia's death on 30 August 2024 triggered the election of the VIII Māori monarch by the Tekau-mā-rua, a diverse group of prominent Māori iwi leaders, academics, executives, and politicians from across many iwi, including those unaffiliated with the Kīngitanga.[12] The announcement of her selection and her installation took place during the tangihanga (funeral) of her father, Kiingi Tūheitia, at Tūrangawaewae Marae.[8] This ceremony, known as Te Whakawahinga, involved the Tekau-mā-rua (the Kīngitanga advisory council) who played a crucial role in selecting her as the new leader.[8] The ceremony included placing a Bible on her head, a tradition that dates back to the establishment of the role.[8] She was anointed by Archbishop Donald Tamihere.[11]
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#161

Post by Slim Cognito »

I love the history guy, watch him every night.

I just finished this one about the night witches of world war II.

May the bridges I burn light my way.

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#162

Post by Suranis »

Marie-Angélique Memmie Le Blanc

Marie-Angélique Memmie Le Blanc (c. 1712 in Wisconsin?, French Louisiana – 15 December 1775 in Paris, France) was a feral child of 18th century France who was known as The Wild Girl of Champagne, The Maid of Châlons, or The Wild Child of Songy.

Her case is more controversial than that of some other feral children because a few modern-day scholars have regarded it as either wholly or partly fictional. However, in 2004, the French author Serge Aroles argued that it was indeed authentic, after spending ten years carrying out archival research into French and American history.

Aroles speculates that Marie-Angélique had survived for ten years living wild in the forests of France, between the ages of nine and 19, before she was captured by villagers in Songy in Champagne in September 1731. He claims that she was born in 1712 as a Native American of the Meskwaki (or "Fox") people in what today is the Midwestern U.S. state of Wisconsin and that she died in Paris in 1775, aged 63. Aroles found archival documents showing that she learned to read and write as an adult, thus making her unique among feral children.

History

It was said that Le Blanc was first seen raiding an apple orchard wearing only rags and wielding a wooden club. When hunters sent their hunting dogs after her, Le Blanc fought them off with her club. A nobleman had given orders to have her apprehended which the hunters managed to pull off.

Contemporary accounts

The story of Marie-Angélique's life in the wild was publicised in the mid-18th century in both France and in Britain through a short pamphlet biography of her by the French writer Marie-Catherine Homassel Hecquet edited by the French scientist-explorer Charles-Marie de la Condamine and published in Paris in 1755.[5] This appeared in an English translation in 1768 as An Account of a Savage Girl, Caught Wild in the Woods of Champagne. However, it was not error-free, since it gave Marie-Angélique's age at the time of her capture as ten, although it is now speculated to have been nineteen.

Interviews with Marie-Angélique herself were recorded by the French royal courtier and diarist Charles-Philippe d’Albert, Duc de Luynes (1753), the French poet Louis Racine (c. 1755) and the Scottish philosopher-judge James Burnett, Lord Monboddo (1765).

:snippity:

Modern assessments

The story of Marie-Angélique's life remains little-known in English-speaking countries and appeared to have been almost forgotten in France until quite recently, with the publication of Julia Douthwaite's articles and book. It was featured in broadcasts by the French radio channel Europe1 in 2011 and by the France Inter channel in 2012.

The French surgeon-author Serge Aroles summarizes Marie-Angélique's life in his second book, L’Enigme des enfants-loups: Une certitude biologique mais un déni des archives 1304–1954 (Paris, Editions Publibook, 2007):
These archives [those studied by Aroles himself] suggest that the only feral child to have survived in the forests for as long as ten years without irreversible deterioration of body or mind was an Amerindian of the 'Renards' or 'Fox' people. She was brought to France from Canada by a lady who unfortunately arrived [by ship] in Marseille during the bubonic plague epidemic in Provence in 1720.

Having escaped the plague that should have killed her, Marie-Angélique walked thousands of kilometers [miles] through the forests of the kingdom of France before being captured in 1731 in the province of Champagne in a state of savagery. During these ten years, she did not live with wolves, but survived them by resisting their attacks with a wooden club and another weapon [a long stick with a sharp metal tip] that she either found or stole. When she was captured, this black-skinned, hairy and clawed huntress was showing some characteristics of regression (she knelt down to drink water and had regular sideways eye movements, similar to nystagmus, the result of a life lived in a state of permanent alertness). However, this girl overcame an extreme challenge harder than the cold, wolves, or hunger: she recovered the faculty of human speech after ten years of mutism.

Despite Aroles' speculation that she was 19 years old when she was captured, a printed text [Hecquet's Histoire d’une jeune fille sauvage] claimed that she was ten. Her intellectual rebirth was important: she learned to read and write, became a nun for a time in a royal abbey, became destitute, was rescued financially by the Queen of France (spouse of Louis XV), maintained her dignity in the face of her long battle with an illness, and died relatively wealthy, as the inventory of her goods shows.

The Scottish philosopher Monboddo, who interviewed Marie-Angélique in 1765, considered her to be the most extraordinary person of his time. However, this woman was forgotten; she disappears, for more than two centuries, behind all the heroines of fiction.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marie-Ang ... e_Le_Blanc
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#163

Post by Foggy »

Yikes. :shock:
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#164

Post by RTH10260 »

I guess your years experience in the Californian costal wilderness does not get you into the contemporary scientific literature ;)
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#165

Post by keith »

I dunno, have we met this lady already?

Cecilia Payne
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#166

Post by pipistrelle »

keith wrote: Mon Sep 16, 2024 6:49 am I dunno, have we met this lady already?

https://www.facebook.com/share/p/6AkSR7 ... tid=oFDknk
I don't think so.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cecilia_Payne-Gaposchkin
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#167

Post by Foggy »

Very cool.
Off Topic
I think President Harris is gonna have a lot of great women in her cabinet. I think I'm going to be gobsmacked by all the competent, smart, sassy women she finds to work with her. A lot of people are not gonna like it, but tough beans. I'm going to thoroughly enjoy it.
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#168

Post by Foggy »

Image
This is Teresa Gould, the Commissioner of the Pacific 12 athletic conference, which damn near died after 10 of the 12 teams left for other conferences, my team included.

But she never quit, and she may have revived the conference, which goes back more than a hundred years. I am personally unhappy about my school's decision to leave the Pac-12. Last week she announced that 4 teams are joining the Pac-12, and that gets them three quarters of the way to long-term survival (the NCAA requires an active conference to have 8 teams minimum; the Pac-12 now has 6).
For the 35-year collegiate sports veteran and someone who had spent the bulk of the past 25 years affiliated with the Pac-12, it was hard to contain her excitement. Since stepping into the role in February, it was not always clear if the conference had a future, and now this ensured it would.

"We have a real opportunity to write a new story for the future and the new Pac-12," Gould told ESPN the next day.
https://www.espn.com/college-football/s ... four-teams
If you don't follow college football, you have no idea how crazy it is right now, how much the manymanymillions are warping the sport, especially now that players 18 years old are making tens of thousands of dollars playing football.

But this lady may have saved the Pac-12, which was a part of my life. And it is worth saving, IMHO.
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#169

Post by John Thomas8 »

Foggy wrote: Tue Sep 17, 2024 7:56 am
Image
This is Teresa Gould, the Commissioner of the Pacific 12 athletic conference, which damn near died after 10 of the 12 teams left for other conferences, my team included.

But she never quit, and she may have revived the conference, which goes back more than a hundred years. I am personally unhappy about my school's decision to leave the Pac-12. Last week she announced that 4 teams are joining the Pac-12, and that gets them three quarters of the way to long-term survival (the NCAA requires an active conference to have 8 teams minimum; the Pac-12 now has 6).
For the 35-year collegiate sports veteran and someone who had spent the bulk of the past 25 years affiliated with the Pac-12, it was hard to contain her excitement. Since stepping into the role in February, it was not always clear if the conference had a future, and now this ensured it would.

"We have a real opportunity to write a new story for the future and the new Pac-12," Gould told ESPN the next day.
https://www.espn.com/college-football/s ... four-teams
If you don't follow college football, you have no idea how crazy it is right now, how much the manymanymillions are warping the sport, especially now that players 18 years old are making tens of thousands of dollars playing football.

But this lady may have saved the Pac-12, which was a part of my life. And it is worth saving, IMHO.
I came here to add Ms Gould. She's the first woman to be a commissioner of a major college football conference and if she pulls off the reconstruction, rightly deserves any accolade that comes her way.
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#170

Post by Suranis »

Just a teeshirt that I saw in an advert. Lotsa names there that people should really notice, and who deserve to be noticed.

REALLY needs a new pair of jeans though.

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#171

Post by keith »

John Thomas8 wrote: Tue Sep 17, 2024 1:21 pm
Foggy wrote: Tue Sep 17, 2024 7:56 am
Image
This is Teresa Gould, the Commissioner of the Pacific 12 athletic conference, which damn near died after 10 of the 12 teams left for other conferences, my team included.

But she never quit, and she may have revived the conference, which goes back more than a hundred years. I am personally unhappy about my school's decision to leave the Pac-12. Last week she announced that 4 teams are joining the Pac-12, and that gets them three quarters of the way to long-term survival (the NCAA requires an active conference to have 8 teams minimum; the Pac-12 now has 6).
For the 35-year collegiate sports veteran and someone who had spent the bulk of the past 25 years affiliated with the Pac-12, it was hard to contain her excitement. Since stepping into the role in February, it was not always clear if the conference had a future, and now this ensured it would.

"We have a real opportunity to write a new story for the future and the new Pac-12," Gould told ESPN the next day.
https://www.espn.com/college-football/s ... four-teams
If you don't follow college football, you have no idea how crazy it is right now, how much the manymanymillions are warping the sport, especially now that players 18 years old are making tens of thousands of dollars playing football.

But this lady may have saved the Pac-12, which was a part of my life. And it is worth saving, IMHO.
I came here to add Ms Gould. She's the first woman to be a commissioner of a major college football conference and if she pulls off the reconstruction, rightly deserves any accolade that comes her way.
Maybe if she had been commissioner 15 years ago instead of the two clowns that managed to destroy it she might have been able to save it.

Nah, who am I kidding? AssU and U$C would never have agreed to any proposal that was put forward no matter how reasonable. Imagine if Oklahoma and Texas had joined the PAC12 back in 2010.
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#172

Post by Tiredretiredlawyer »

I love this thread!
"Mickey Mouse and I grew up together." - Ruthie Tompson, Disney animation checker and scene planner and one of the first women to become a member of the International Photographers Union in 1952.
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#173

Post by Suranis »

Delia Derbyshire, Creator of the Doctor Who theme music, and Pioneer of Electronic Music.



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#174

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‘Moneypenny with more power’: book celebrates UK’s forgotten female spies
Dr Claire Hubbard-Hall reveals contribution of Kathleen Pettigrew, most senior secretary in MI6 and inspiration for Ian Fleming, and others in new title

Donna Ferguson
Mon 23 Sep 2024 06.00 CEST

For decades, their work has been hidden from view, their names missing from the history books.

Now, a new book is seeking to shine a light on the secret and unacknowledged contributions of female spies who worked for MI6 in the early 20th century, and establish their place in history using previously classified evidence and newly unearthed documents.

One of the women, Kathleen Pettigrew, was the most senior secretary in MI6, serving under five MI6 chiefs. There she met Ian Fleming, who – in his first draft of Casino Royale – named Miss Moneypenny “Miss ‘Petty’ Pettaval”.

Yet little is known about the work she did and the role she played in some of the biggest spy operations in British history.

Dr Claire Hubbard-Hall, author of the forthcoming book, Her Secret Service: The Forgotten Women of British Intelligence, has discovered previously classified evidence that suggests Pettigrew was involved in the transfer of messages to and from Hut 3 at Bletchley Park, including the messages Alan Turing and his team were decoding using the Enigma machine.



https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/202 ... male-spies
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Random women who deserve to be noticed

#175

Post by Tiredretiredlawyer »

Cool!!!!
"Mickey Mouse and I grew up together." - Ruthie Tompson, Disney animation checker and scene planner and one of the first women to become a member of the International Photographers Union in 1952.
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