Hannah Moylan

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Hannah Alexandra Moylan
Hannah Moylan wearing Graduation Robes at Alexandra College in 1897
Born1867
Galway
Died15 June 1902
Cairo
NationalityIrish
EducationBSc
Alma materAlexandra College
Known forEducationist with bachelor of science degree

Hannah Alexandra Moylan (1867 – 15 June 1902) was the first woman to get a degree in science in Ireland.

Early life and education[edit]

Born Hannah Moylan of the Newcastle Road, Galway to Jeremiah Moylan and Mary Fitzgerald of Cork. Her mother was the matron and her father the headmaster of the Model school. Her father went on to become a Barrington Lecturer on Political Economy. Moylan was baptised on 2 December 1867, her exact date of birth is unknown. She was their second youngest child of ten. Her oldest brother Michael became a doctor. Her oldest sister a school governess and the youngest sister Vida Mary Augusta Constance Moylan (1871-1962) married William Worby Beaumont, an engineer and inventor. Her sister Josephine was a novelist who wrote under the name Errol Fitzgerald. In 1873 the family moved to Limerick where they were living when her mother died. Moylan got her primary education from her father but went to Madame De Prins College for Young Ladies and the Ladies Intermediate School on Catherine Street in Limerick for her secondary education. She won prizes in her examinations while in school.[1][2][3]

In July 1887 she matriculated at the Royal University of Ireland where she studied the Arts.[4] At the time it was not possible for a young woman to attend university directly and so Moylan got her university education from Alexandra College, Dublin and qualified with a BA in French, English and Mathematics in 1891. She won scholarships and awards during the period where she took her university exams through Trinity College Dublin.[1][5]

Career[edit]

Moylan took up a teaching position in Alexandria College from which she took a break in 1895 to study for a BSc through Queen's University Galway. Moylan was the first woman student to get this degree in Ireland. The next woman to do this was Jane Stephens in 1903. Once she had the second degree, Moylan returned to Alexandra College where she remained a lecturer. She was an activist in promoting women's education. Moylan was part of the Central Association of Irish Schoolmistresses working to get permission for women to be admitted to Trinity College Dublin. Even while in college herself she wrote papers for journals, mostly in mathematics. Moylan also worked on the need for training for secondary teachers in Ireland and on methods of teaching mathematics. Moylan was a founding member of the Alexandra College Guild, a philanthropic organisation of current and past members of the college. This established the Alexandra College Guild Tenement Company created to improve housing conditions in Dublin. Moylan was a director of the company.[1][6][7]

By 1900 Moylan was studying for the Oxford University exams on the theory, history and practice of education. When she was finished this she took up a position in Saniah Girls School in Cairo. She left Europe to start the next term in October 1901. However Moylan contracted typhoid fever in June 1902. She was expected to recover but died in the British Nursing Home in the Ismailia Quarter of Cairo on 15 June 1902.[1][8]

Moylan was buried in Cairo. At the time she was still the only woman BSc of the Royal University of Ireland.[1]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d e Lucey, John (2016). "Hannah Moylan (1867-1902): Educationist Who Was First Woman Bachelor of Science in Ireland". The Irish Journal of Education. 41: 61–77. JSTOR 24891699.
  2. ^ "The Morning News Belfast". Newspapers.com. 12 September 1882. p. 7. Retrieved 14 November 2018.
  3. ^ "The Freeman's Journal Dublin". Newspapers.com. 12 September 1882. p. 7. Retrieved 14 November 2018.
  4. ^ UK, Medical and Dental Students Registers, 1882-1937 for Hannah Alexandra Moylan - Medical Students Register (1893)
  5. ^ "Papers Past". National Library of New Zealand. Retrieved 14 November 2018.
  6. ^ "Remedies for overcrowding in the city of Dublin". ProQuest. 14 November 2018. Retrieved 14 November 2018.
  7. ^ Hógartaigh, Margaret Ó. (2009). "A Quiet Revolution: Women and Second-Level Education in Ireland, 1878–1930". New Hibernia Review. 13 (2): 36–51. doi:10.1353/nhr.0.0080. JSTOR 25660870. S2CID 144348909.
  8. ^ Hannah Alexandra Moylan in the England & Wales, National Probate Calendar (Index of Wills and Administrations), 1858-1995 (1902)