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25 Facts About Maria Gordon

1.

Maria Gordon was the first woman to be awarded a Doctor of Science degree from the University of London and the first woman to be awarded a PhD degree from the University of Munich.

2.

Maria Gordon was a supporter and campaigner for the rights and equality of children and women.

3.

Maria Gordon's eldest brother, Francis Grant Ogilvie, was a scientist and director of the London Science Museum.

4.

Maria Gordon attended this school until she was eighteen and in those eight years, she became both head girl and the best academic pupil.

5.

Maria Gordon continued her music career by attending the Royal Academy of Music in London.

6.

Maria Gordon was refused admission as women were not admitted to higher education institutions at the time in Germany, this despite the efforts of several influential friends and colleagues, including geologist Baron Ferdinand von Richthofen.

7.

At the time when she and the Richthofen's visited the nearby meadows of Stuores, Maria Gordon focused her studies on modern corals and planned to study zoology rather than geology.

8.

Maria Gordon began to teach local collectors of the area to be more careful when describing, collecting and recording the fossils they had found.

9.

Maria Gordon was in the scientific field, working as a physician.

10.

Maria Gordon had written hundreds of pages worth of research that she intended to have translated and published in German, and this research included a very detailed geological map that she had coloured by hand.

11.

Once he had Maria Gordon's collected work, she sent it on to a student who could successfully translate it from English to German.

12.

Progress was going along well, and the first few of Maria Gordon's maps had been drawn on lithographic stone and were set to begin the printing process when World War I began in 1914.

13.

Finally, in 1927, Maria Gordon was able to publish her major scientific work by the Geographical Survey of Austria institute, entitled The Groden, Fassa and Enneberg areas in the South Tyrolean Dolomites and subtitled Geological Descriptions with emphasis on overthrust fault phenomena.

14.

Therefore, Maria Gordon is seen as one of the first people to acknowledge the importance of geotourism with her geological conclusions becoming common knowledge.

15.

Maria Gordon was active in politics as a Liberal and an advocate of women's and children's rights.

16.

Maria Gordon was a part of an article that discussed the environments of children in the early 1900s.

17.

Maria Gordon advocated that children, and especially young girls, should be in the classroom rather than in the workforce.

18.

Maria Gordon protested against the state, maintaining that students should not be removed from school so young, with still so much to learn.

19.

Maria Gordon advocated for the same curriculum to be taught to all, instead of boys and girls having different lessons based on gender norms.

20.

Maria Gordon played an important part in the post-World War I negotiations at the Council for the Representation of Women in the League of Nations.

21.

In 1890, Maria Gordon graduated from the University College of London with a gold medal in geology, zoology, and botany.

22.

In 1916, Maria Gordon was made President of the National Council of Women of Great Britain and Ireland.

23.

In 1919, Maria Gordon helped form the Council of Representation of Woman in the League of Nations.

24.

Maria Gordon played an active role in the World War one negotiations while a part of the council.

25.

Maria Gordon became an honorary member of the Vienna Geological society and at the time she was the only female honorary member in 1931.