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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Booking  





2 What is a Women in Red event  





3 Getting started with Women in Red  





4 The Wikipedia training  





5 Some short video tutorials  





6 The basics  





7 Having problems?  



7.1  Having problems creating an account?  





7.2  Having problems accessing the Visual Editor?  







8 How do I prepare?  





9 The Manual of Style  





10 Things to remember - anyone can edit BUT cite what you write!  





11 Current and upcoming priorities for WikiProject Women in Red  





12 Use the PrepBio tool  





13 Trainers  





14 Training guides  



14.1  Images and videos  







15 Worklist of articles to create and improve  



15.1  December 2023 ideas  



15.1.1  Witch tour of Edinburgh pages  





15.1.2  Biographical Dictionary ideas  





15.1.3  Articles to improve  





15.1.4  Other ideas  





15.1.5  Women in Sport - Heidi's World Cup 2023 focus  





15.1.6  Even more ideas  





15.1.7  - D, E, F, G, H, I, J in the Biographical Dictionary of Scottish Women  





15.1.8  Women of Edinburgh - obits  









16 Sources  



16.1  Suggested sources:  



16.1.1  General  





16.1.2  News sources  





16.1.3  Theses databases  









17 Outcomes  



17.1  Newly created pages  





17.2  Improved pages  







18 Template for the editathon  





19 What can I do after the event?  





20 External links  





21 Participants - Sign Up Here!  





22 References  














Wikipedia:University of Edinburgh/Events and Workshops/Women in Red







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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 

< Wikipedia:University of Edinburgh | Events and Workshops

Women in Red - A Wiki meetup every month to improve Wikipedia's representation of notable women is hosted at the University of Edinburgh and supported by the Women in Red project.

Long Boi, a celebrity duck in York has a page on Wikipedia but 1,000s upon 1,000s of notable women still do not. We can change that. #WeCanEdit!
University of Edinburgh edit-a-thon

Booking[edit]

Everyone is welcome!
Book your place for each upcoming meeting below.

More events on Eventbrite and on Wikimedia Scotland's site'.
You can get lots of helpful information on the Wikimedia residency at the University of Edinburgh website.

We Can Edit


What is a Women in Red event

Have you ever wondered why the information in Wikipedia is extensive for some topics and scarce for others? As part of the Wikimedia residency at the University of Edinburgh, the University's Information Services team will run an informal Wiki meetup focused on improving Wikipedia's representation of notable women; turning red-linked articles that don't yet exist into blue clickable ones that do.

These are drop-in sessions so knowledge of Wikipedia editing is beneficial. However, Wikipedia editing can be easy to pick up as this 5 minute walkthrough of the new Visual Editor interface demonstrates. The editing will focus on creating and improving the quality of articles about notable women on Wikipedia using source texts such as The Biographical Dictionary of Scottish Women.

In November 2014, just over 15% of the English Wikipedia's biographies were about women. Founded in July 2015, WikiProject Women in Red strives to increase the percentage, which has reached 19.84% as of 3 June 2024. But that means that of 2,005,925 biographies, only 398,011 are about women.[1] Not impressed? "Content gender gap" is a form of systemic bias, and this series of meetups seeks to address it in a positive way.

Come along to learn about how Wikipedia works and create new role models for young and old alike!

Getting started with Women in Red

Women in Red
Building a Biography - simplified
Creating a Wikipedia Userpage
  1. Please create an account on Wikipedia if you have not done so as yet (having problems? see below) and join the dashboard page for today's workshop.
  2. Have a look at the suggested obits on notable women and our monthly Women in Red worklist of pages to create/improve below and decide who you want to work on. More redlinks can be found on WikiProject Women in Red's crowdsourced and Wikidata-driven Redlist index. Once you have decided who to work on Add your chosen page here.
  3. Join WikiProject Women in Red and join our next event on Thursday January 2024 for Burns Night.

The Wikipedia training

  1. Please visit My personal sandbox page
  2. Copy the text
  3. Click on your username link at the top of the screen.
  4. Click the Create tab to open your userpage up in Visual Editor mode if your link is in red. This is next to the search bar on Wikipedia. Please click the Edit tab if your page is in blue.
  5. Once into your userpage and the dropdown menus are available, paste the copied text into your userpage.
  6. Then click the blue Publish page button to save the page with an edit summary of added text to my user page.

NB: I train people every month and essentially say much the same thing. Here is one such recording but don’t worry we will make sure you get full training. Main training tutorial: How to begin editing Wikipedia (53 mins)

Some short video tutorials

  1. Exploring the main page of Wikipedia (4 mins)
  2. How to create an account on Wikipedia (1 min 30 secs)
  3. How to switch on the (easier to use) Visual Editor interface (1 min 20secs)
  4. How to create a user page and play around with formatting (4 mins)
  5. How to create an article on Wikipedia (7 mins)
  6. How to move your drafted article to the main article space on Wikipedia (2 mins)
  7. How to add bold, headings, links, italics to a Wikipedia page (3 mins)
  8. How to add citations and references to a Wikipedia page (3 mins)
  9. How to upload an image to Wikimedia Commons (Wikipedia’s sister project) - 4 mins
  10. How to insert an image from Wikimedia Commons onto a Wikipedia page (3 mins)
  11. How to edit existing pages on Wikipedia (4 mins)
  12. Some printable resources are here.

These are all embedded in our student-created Wikimedian in Residence website here to make the how & why of editing Wikipedia much easier to engage with. Undergraduate student Hannah Rothmann’s work creating this website and the video resources above in lockdown Summer 2020 won an Open Education Global award recently. Because we felt that students, educators and everyone should be able to do this much more simply and have this ‘need to know’ information readily and openly available so I hope this is of use to you.

The basics

  1. How to create a Wikipedia user page (pdf guide) - More pdf guides below.
  2. Wikipedia Basics site (how to add a link, citation, image and more).
  3. How to edit - video playlists ((how to add a link, citation, image and more).
  4. Have a look at our new Histropedia timeline of Women's suffrage in Scotland.
  5. Have a look at our Navigation box template we add to the foot of pages about the Scottish suffragettes. We can create, amend and add more Women in Red to these templates and make these pages more discoverable.
  6. There is a draft biography you can look at and use as an exemplar: Mary Blathwayt.
  7. Would you like to do more editing after today? Go to WikiProject Women in Red and you can take part in their monthly themed editing events and we will hold more online Wiki Women in Red editing events too.



Having problems?

Having problems creating an account?[edit]

Having problems accessing the Visual Editor?[edit]

Wikipedia has a new Visual Editor interface which makes editing Wikipedia as easy as using Microsoft Word or Wordpress blogs through its use of dropdown menus. Annoyingly this Visual Editor interface sometimes needs enabled in your Preferences menu. It's a straightforward step to do this however and once switched on you shouldn't need to do this step again. Always use the Visual Editor if given the choice between it and the older Source Editor (unless you like working with html markup text!).

Interview Emily Temple-Wood discussing gender diversity on Wikipedia

How do I prepare?[edit]

The Manual of Style[edit]

Wikipedia has help pages which set out style guidelines for pages being created on certain subject areas. Please have a look at the following pages:

Questions about editing? Read the Wiki-editing FAQ!

Things to remember - anyone can edit BUT cite what you write![edit]

  1. Wikipedia is a tertiary source. Articles are backed up by facts from reliable, published secondary sources. Primary sources tend not to be used. A breadth & depth of quality sources helps demonstrates notability which is an important yardstick for articles staying on Wikipedia.
  2. Write with encyclopedic content in mind. Not academic essay. Strip back your writing to the facts.
  3. Write accessibly with a lay audience in mind. Any jargon needs explained the first time it is mentioned.
  4. Write with a neutral point of view. Split text up into sections with headings.
  5. Cite everything you write. Keep a note of urls (open access if possible), Journal articles DOI identifiers, Book ISBN numbers. Page numbers, volume numbers and book chapters should be included in your citation information too.
  6. Draft content in your sandbox draft space first. Wikipedia is a work in progress for sure but you can prepare articles or new sections for articles in peace in your personal draft space (the sandbox) and migrate it when ready.
  7. Write in your own words as much as possible. Even close paraphrasing counts as copyright violation. Short quotes can be included but need to be attributed.
  8. Links in the main body of the article should only be to other Wikipedia pages. You only need to add links when the term is first mentioned in the article. Linking every time is considered overlinking. Sites outside of Wikipedia should be linked in a separate section at the foot of the page with an External links heading. No more than 5-8 links to websites outside of Wikipedia - we are not a link farm!
  9. Images have to open-licensed to be allowed on Wikipedia. CC-0, Public domain, CC-BY, CC-BY-SA licensed images are allowed and are hosted on sister project, Wikimedia Commons. Open images can be searched for using search aggregator tools such as CC Search.
  10. Want to learn more? Go to our website, join/email Wikimedia UK or just mail me at ewan.mcandrew@ed.ac.uk with any questions or ideas for collaborations.


Current and upcoming priorities for WikiProject Women in Red

Join WikiProject Women in Red by registering in the box at the top of the WIR page. You can then add a userbox to your user page.

Continuing global coverage

Year-long initiatives

Happening now

Recently completed

Previous events

Past University of Edinburgh meetup details can be found here.

Use the PrepBio tool[edit]

Trainers[edit]

Training guides[edit]

Here are some useful links to help you with your editing:

Images and videos[edit]

Video of a seal at Newburgh beach, Aberdeenshire (my home town)
Newburgh beach
Newburgh beach

Wikipedia pages can feel a tad lifeless without an image or short video to help illustrate it. We can change that. We can edit!
Just have a look at the images and videos we have added to the University of Edinburgh library page by way of illustration!

Why not help document cultural heritage as part of the world's largest photo competition, Wiki Loves Monuments, where thousands of photos of listed buildings and monuments worldwide (interiors and exteriors) are uploaded for the benefit of the global open knowledge community every year

Some ways to keep track of your edits


Worklist of articles to create and improve

Helpful updates could be as simple as: Making sure reference links are still appropriate and functional; Adding new inline citations/references; Adding a photo; Adding an infobox; Adding data to more fields in an existing infobox; Creating headings; Adding categories; etc.

The following is a small sample of topics to work on. Feel free to come up with your own ideas!

December 2023 ideas[edit]

Cite what you write! 50-100 words or more written with a neutral point of view AND backed up with citations from reliable published secondary sources is enough to get a new article published. e.g. Example of minimum requirements

Dr Varsha Jain with NASA Orion Capsule

Witch tour of Edinburgh pages[edit]

Biographical Dictionary ideas[edit]

Use the Biographical Dictionary of Scottish Women to write your new Wikipedia page

  1. Annie Johnston (folklorist) born Barra 10 Feb. 1886, died Barra 6 March 1963. Gaelic folklorist. Daughter of Catherine McNeil, and Angus Johnston. Needs added to disambiguation page and some incoming links.
  2. Euphemia Johnston born 1824 Inveresk, died after 1867. Lady’s nurse. Daughter of Jean Brackenridge, and James Alexander.
  3. Caroline Johnston born Alva, Clackmannanshire, 25 July 1849, died Alva 4 July 1929. Philanthropist.
  4. Christian Johnston born Edinburgh 12 June 1781, died Edinburgh 26 August 1857. Journalist and woman of letters.
  5. Bessie Stivenson - Stirling accused witch
  6. Jean Gordon (Scottish Gypsy) (1670 to 1746) born into one of the gypsy tribes of Kirk Yetholm, died Carlisle 1746.
  7. John Kincaid (witch pricker) (witch pricker, 1660s)
  8. Elizabeth Stewart (singer), singer of traditional ballads and songs. [2][3]
  9. Janet Keiller (shopkeeper) n. Mathewson, born Dundee c. 1737, died Dundee 23 July 1813. Shopkeeper, associate in marmalade family.
  10. Elizabeth Keir n. Rae, born probably early 1750s, died Edinburgh 3 Nov. 1834. Writer, philanthropist.
  11. Dame Elizabeth Ker (‘Old Lady Buccleuch’), born c. 1478, died Catslak Tower, 19 Oct. 1548. Victim of a bloodfeud.
  12. Isabella Kerr (Isabel), n. Gunn, born Enzie, Banff, 30 May 1875, died India 12 Jan. 1932. Medical missionary.
  13. Jessie King (childtaker), born Glasgow 27 March 1861, died Edinburgh 11 March 1889. Childminder.
  14. Mary Kerr, n. Kerr, born Bellshiel, near Swinton, Berwickshire, 12 Dec. 1905, died Edinburgh 25 May 1998. Bondager and domestic servant.
  15. Joan Knight, OBE, born Walton-le-Dale, Lancs., 27 Sept. 1924, died Perth 20 Dec. 1996. Theatre director. checkY
  16. Mary Marjory McDonald- the 'Scottish Queen of Thieves'. [4]
  17. Beatrice Grant n. Campbell, baptised Kilmartin 2 Sept. 1761, died Nairn 20 Feb. 1845. Author and educator. Eldest daughter of Matilda Campbell, and Neil Campbell of Duntroon, impoverished laird.
  18. Margaret Laidlaw - m. Hogg, born Ettrick 1730, died Ettrick 1813. Tradition-bearer.
  19. Robena Anna Laidlaw (later Anna Robena), m. Thomson, born Bretton, Yorkshire, 30 April 1819, died London 29 May 1901. Pianist.
  20. Mary Lamond - born Edinburgh 22 Feb. 1862, died 15 March 1949. Deaconess and president, Church of Scotland Woman’s Guild.
  21. (Murdina May Lamont Stewart) Ena Lamont Stewart, n. Lamont, born Glasgow 10 Feb. 1912, died Dalmellington 9 Feb. 2006. Playwright.
  22. Christina Larner born London 22 Nov. 1933, died Glasgow 27 April 1983. Historian
  23. Margaret Troup Laws - n. Gray, born Aberdeen, 4 Feb. 1849, died Edinburgh 17 Sept. 1921. Teacher, translator, missionary.
  24. Isabella Wilson Legge, n. Wilson, baptised Skene, Aberdeenshire 16 Aug. 1812, died Aberdeen 27 May 1884. Chartist.
  25. (Margaret Mary Leigh) Margaret Leigh, born Oxford 17 Dec. 1894, died Inverness 7 April 1973. Author and farmer.
  26. Anne Leith, fl. 1740s. Helped Jacobite prisoners after Culloden.
  27. Leah Leneman Leah, born De Kalb, Illinois, USA, 3 March 1944, died Edinburgh 26 Dec. 1999. Historian and cookery writer.
  28. Agnes Lennox, fl. 1839–1841. Chartist leader. Agnes Lennox was the chairwoman of the Gorbals Female Universal Suffrage Association of Glasgow, founded in 1839, which brought women into the Chartist movement, and provided soirées and temperance teas.
  29. Beatrix Leslie (or Beatrice), born c. 1577, died 3 Sept. 1661. Midwife. Executed for witchcraft.
  30. Euphemia Leslie, born c. 1508, died Elcho 7 Sept. 1570. Prioress of Elcho.
  31. Rev. Dr Mary Irene Levison , n. Lusk, born Oxford, 8 Jan. 1923, died Edinburgh, 12 Sept. 2011. Church of Scotland minister.
  32. Agnes Smith Lewis, n. Smith, GIBSON, Margaret Dunlop, n. Smith; born Irvine 1843, died Cambridge 29 March 1926 and 11 Jan. 1920 respectively. Travellers, scholars of Semitic languages.
  33. Elizabeth Macadam, born Chryston, near Glasgow, 10 Oct. 1871, died Edinburgh 25 Oct. 1948. Social worker. Daughter of Elizabeth Whyte, and Thomas Macadam, Presbyterian minister.
  34. Mary McAlister aka Mary Agnes Josephine McMackin, CBE, born Glasgow 26 April 1896, died Glasgow, 26 Feb. 1976. Labour councillor and MP. Daughter of Winifred Deeney, and Charles McMackin, publican.
  35. Mary Reid MacArthur aka Mary MacArthur m. Anderson, born Glasgow 13 Aug. 1880, died London 1 Jan. 1921. Trade unionist and Labour activist. Daughter of Anne Elizabeth Martin, and John Duncan Macarthur, draper.
  36. Ishbel Margaret MacAskill aka Ishbel MacAskill , n. MacIver (Iseabail NicAsgaill), born Loanhead, Edinburgh, 14 March 1941, died Inverness 31 March 2011. Traditional Gaelic singer, teacher and activist. Adopted daughter of Christina MacLeod, and Allan MacIver, weaver, serving in RNVR, of Broker, Isle of Lewis.
  37. Ann Macbeth born Bolton 25 Sept. 1875, died Patterdale 23 March 1948. Embroiderer and teacher. Daughter of Annie MacNicol, and Norman Macbeth, engineer.
  38. Janet Hutchinson McCallum als Janet McCallum aka Jennie McCallum, m.Richardson, born Dunfermline 27 July 1881, died Pretoria, South Africa, 24 March 1946. Suffragette. Daughter of Janet Hutchinson, and John McCallum, stone mason.
  39. Georgiana Huntly McCrae aka Georgina McCrae, n. Gordon, born London 15 March 1804, died Melbourne, Australia, 24 May 1890. Painter. Illegitimate daughter of Jane Graham, and George Gordon, Marquis of Huntly.
  40. Jennifer McCrindle aka Jenny McCrindle, born Glasgow 19 Sept. 1968, died Glasgow 26 Oct. 2014. Actor. Daughter of Libby Robertson, office worker, and George McCrindle, insurance agent.
  41. Agnes MacDonald, born Edinburgh 8 Sept. 1882, died Edinburgh 16 Oct. 1966. Suffrage and women’s citizenship campaigner. Daughter of Euphemia Henderson, and Alexander Macdonald, wine and spirit merchant.
  42. Ann Smith MacDonald aka Annie Smith MacDonaldorAnnie MacDonald (Annie), n. Johnston, born Barony, Lanark, 20 Nov. 1849, died Edinburgh 21 Oct. 1924. Artistic bookbinder. Daughter of Lucy Leitch, and Fred Johnston, bank cashier.
  43. Camelia Ethel McDonald aka Camelia McDonald, born 24 Feb. 1909, Bellshill, died Glasgow 1 Dec. 1960. Anarchist envoy to Spanish civil war, printer. Daughter of Daisy Watts, and Andrew McDonald, coach painter.
  44. Flora MacDonald n. MacDonald, born Milton, South Uist 1722, died Penduin, Isle of Skye 4 March 1790. Jacobite heroine. Daughter of Marion MacDonald, minister’s daughter, and Ranald MacDonald of Milton and Balivanich, tacksman.
  45. Louisa MacDonald born Arbroath 10 Dec. 1858, died Marylebone, London, 28 Nov. 1949. Scholar, pioneering college principal, Australia. Daughter of Ann Kidd, and John Macdonald, WS and town clerk.
  46. Margaret Macdonald Mackintosh, born Tipton, Staffordshire, 5 Nov. 1864, died London 7 Jan. 1933. Frances Eliza MacDonald, born Kidsgrove, Staffordshire, 24 August 1873, died Glasgow 12 Dec. 1921. Artist designers. Daughters of Frances Grove Hardeman, and John Macdonald, engineer.
  47. Margaret MacDonald (estate manager), of Sleat, n. Montgomerie, born Eglinton c. 1716, died 30 March 1799. Estate manager. Daughter of Susanna Kennedy of Culzean, and Alexander, 9th Earl of Eglinton.
  48. Margo MacDonald aka Margo Symington MacDonald, n. Aitken, m1 MacDonald, m2 Sillars, born Hamilton 19 April 1943, died Edinburgh 4 April 2014. Teacher, politician, columnist, broadcaster, Right to Die activist. Daughter of Jean Aitken, nurse, and Robert Aitken, coalminer.
  49. Mary MacDonald n. MacDougall, born Ardtun, Isle of Mull, 1789, died Ardtun 21 May 1872. Gaelic poet and hymn writer. . Daughter of Anne Morrison, and Duncan MacDougall, farmer.
  50. Lily McDougall aka Lily Martha Maud McDougall, born Glasgow 25 July 1875, died Edinburgh 21 Dec. 1958. Artist and hostess. Daughter of Matilda Milne, and William Henrie McDougall, banker.
  51. Agnes McDouall, n. Buchan-Hepburn, born East Linton 27 Sept. 1838, died Logan 15 March 1926. Gardener and plant collector. Daughter of Helen Little, and Sir Thomas Buchan-Hepburn.
  52. Hope MacDougall, MACDOUGALL of MacDougall, Margaret Hope Garnons, born Athlone, Ireland 21 Jan. 1913, died Oban 22 Dec. 1998. Historian and collector. Daughter of Colina MacDougall, and Alexander James MacDougall, Chief of the Clan MacDougall.
  53. Helen MacFarlane, [Howard Morton], m1 Proust, m2 Edwards, born Barrhead 25 Dec. 1818, died Baddiley, near Nantwich, 29 Mar. 1860. Radical journalist, first translator of The Communist Manifesto. Daughter of Helen Stenhouse, and George Macfarlane, owner of calico-printing mills.
  54. Jessie MacFarlane, m. Brodie, born Edinburgh 20 Jan. 1843, died Edinburgh 18 August 1871. Itinerant preacher. Daughter of Mary Maxwell Turner, and Archibald McFarlane, clothier.
  55. Margaret McGhie, fl. 1760–1770s, Aberdeen. Innkeeper.
  56. Hannah MacGoun Hannah Clarke Preston, born Edinburgh 19 June 1864, died Edinburgh 20 August 1913. Artist, illustrator. Daughter of Isabella Clarke, and Rev. Robert William MacGoun of Greenock.
  57. Betty MacGregor aka Elizabeth MacGregor Janet Elizabeth (Betty), MD, FRCPath, OBE, n. McPherson, born Glasgow 12 Jan. 1920, died Lynn of Lorne 8 Oct. 2005. Doctor and cytol�ogist. Daughter of Jean (Jennie) Craig, and Andrew McPherson, company secretary.
  58. Margaret MacGregor Margaret Ann Kinniburgh, n. Burns, baptised Edinburgh 11 Nov. 1838, died Glasgow 20 Jan. 1901. Bible Woman and Lady Mission Superintendent. Daughter of Jeanie Marshall, and James Burns, clerk.
  59. Frances McIan Frances Matilda (Fanny), n. Whitaker, m1 McIan, m2 Unwin, born Bath c. 1814, died London 7 April 1897. Artist, painter of Highland scenes. Daughter of Sarah Hawkins, upholsterer, and William Whitaker, cabinetmaker.
  60. Anne Louise McIlroy aka Louise McIlroy, DBE, born Lavin House, Co. Antrim, c. 1875, died Girvan, Ayrshire, 8 Feb. 1968. Obstetrician, gynaecologist. Daughter of James McIlroy, GP, and his wife.
  61. Helen McInnes aka Helen MacInnes, Helen Clark, m. Highet, born Glasgow 7 Oct. 1907, died New York, USA, 30 Sept. 1985. Novelist. Daughter of Jessie McDiarmid, and Donald McInnes, joiner.

Articles to improve[edit]

Other ideas[edit]

Some men could also be added. A few suggestions:

Women in Sport - Heidi's World Cup 2023 focus[edit]

Even more ideas[edit]

- D, E, F, G, H, I, J in the Biographical Dictionary of Scottish Women[edit]

Latest additions for March 2023

Women of Edinburgh - obits[edit]

  • Beth Porter - American-born stage and screen actor who appeared as the brash pop manager Kitty Schreiber in the ITV show Rock Follies of 77.[8]
  • Lorna Waite - Lorna J Waite, academic, poet and community activist.[9]
  • Sarah Lawson (actress) Stage and screen actor who appeared in the 1968 film The Devil Rides Out and the ITV prison drama series Within These Walls. [10]
  • Renata Scotto - Dramatically intense soprano with a scintillating if hard-edged tone who relished the role of a diva both on and off stage.[11]
  • Angela Flowers - Leading British art gallery owner and businesswoman who placed loyalty above all else.[12]
  • Winnie Ewing - Scottish politician whose 1967 byelection triumph in Hamilton heralded a breakthrough for the SNP. Can article be improved from Guardian obit? [13]
  • Ann Gemmell Clipson, artist and designer from Glasgow and a champion of change at the National Trust for Scotland. [14]
  • Cynthia Weil, US songwriter who co-wrote You've Lost That Loving Feeling. [15]
  • Glenda Jackson Actor who was a fearless, ferocious presence in theatre, cinema and television, then turned to politics as a Labour MP. Can article be improved from Guardian obit? [16]
  • Lady Campbell of Pittenweem, lively Edinburgh political hostess and support to husband Ming. "She was a woman of fierce intelligence, and as far removed from the stereotypical sandal-wearing Lib Dem activist as it was possible to be." Telegraph obit (may be paywalled). [17]
  • Ranjit Kaur, activist, magistrate and Scottish trade unionist. Ranjit Kaur, campaigner. Born: 6 February 1960 in Leamington Spa, England. Died: 25 November 2022, Edinburgh, aged 62. [18]
  • Claire Lamont - Romantics scholar, leading expert on Scottish author Sir Walter Scott.[19][20]
  • Muriel Clark - TV home economist described as ‘the Scottish Mary Poppins’.[21]
  • Judith Miller (antiques expert) - [22]
  • Dr. Patricia Thomas (headteacher) - Patricia Thomas, head for 16 years of James Gillespie’s High School, died peacefully after a short illness at 95. Thanks to former pupil Muriel Spark and The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie, Gillespie’s is one of the most famous schools in the world. [23]
  • Alison McCleery - served on the Population Group of the Institute of British Geographers, acting for many years as its secretary. [24]
  • Janet Speight spent her career trying to improve opportunities for children and later used her experiences of aphasia to shape and improve understanding the disorder. [25]
  • Kath M. Melia - [26] Edinburgh University Professor of Nursing Studies. Check WP:GNG for notable academics.
  • Eileen Sheridan - Cycling champion dubbed the ‘pocket rocket’ whose spectacular feats in the 1950s captured the public imagination. [27]
  • Veronica McTernan, Labour Party campaigner and Children’s Panel member. [28]
  • Olive Hilliard - [29] Botanist from South Africa who moved to Scotland in her later years to work on research at the Royal Botanic Garden in Edinburgh.
  • Margaret Runcie [30][31][32][33][34] - Margaret Runcie bred many Royal Highland Show winners and won numerous other accolades.
  • Karin McPherson, expert in East German literature. [35]
  • Julie Powell - Writer whose blog about cooking her way through the recipes of Julia Child became the Hollywood film Julie & Julia. [36]
  • Alison Robinson, ceramicist who founded Bridge Pottery Collective. [37]
  • Elizabeth Stewart (singer), singer of traditional ballads and songs. [38][39]
  • Joyce Molyneux, chef and restaurateur. [40]
  • Beryl Goldwyn - Dancer who was able to capture the essence of Romantic ballet and was also impressive in more modern works. [41]
  • Lady Blood aka May Blood - First female life peer from Northern Ireland whose activism bridged the sectarian divide.[42]
  • Hilary Mantel - author [43]
  • Gwyneth Powell - actor in Grange Hill who played the headteacher Mrs. McClusky - [44]
  • Daphne Godson - accomplished violinist and founder member of Scottish Baroque Ensemble. Born: 16 March, 1932 in Edinburgh. Died: 15 August, 2022 in Edinburgh, aged 90 - [45]
  • Josephine Tewson - actress [46]
  • Jan Dewing - Sue Pembrey chair in nursing and director of the Centre for Person-centred Practice Research at Queen Margaret University, Edinburgh, where she was also head of the graduate research school [47]
  • Anne Neville (researcher) - peerless engineering researcher. Born: March 1970. Died: 2 July 2022. [48]
  • Diana Kahn - Chair of Age UK. [49].
  • Anni Rainbow was a Quaker, peace campaigner and passionate activist. [50]
  • Judith Durham - singer. [51][52]
  • Vanessa Rosenthal - actor and writer. [53]
  • Shirley Barrett - Australian film maker and writer. [54]
  • Joyce Laing (art therapist) - art-therapy pioneer who helped transform the lives of prisoners in Barlinnie's Special Unit. [55]
  • Joan Lingard - Prolific author best known for the Kevin and Sadie young adult novels charting friendship across the divide in 1970s Belfast. [56]
  • Gerda Rubinstein - prolific sculptor in the Netherlands and the UK. [57][58]
  • Margaret Richards (architect), Scottish architect. Born: 3 November 1928. Died: 20 February 2022 in Edinburgh, aged 93. [59]
  • Liz Douglas, Scottish artist known for her nature works. Born: September 15 1945 in Forfar, Angus. Died: May 10 2022 in Selkirk, Scottish Borders, aged 76. [60]
  • Yvonne Blenkinsop - Campaigner for the safety of trawlermen and one of the ‘headscarf revolutionaries’ who changed the fishing industry in the 1960s. [61]
  • Elspeth Barker -n/ Journalist and author whose darkly funny 1991 novel O Caledonia has found its place as a Scottish classbic.[62]
  • Una Flett, author. [63]
  • Gloria Randall a social worker who was attuned to the particular needs of Jewish refugee clients. [64]
  • Jennifer Piercey - actor. [65]
  • Patricia Ann Ferguson - Scottish engineer and businesswoman. Born: 12 February 1936 in Dundee. Died: 24 March 2022 in Auchterarder, aged 86 [66]
  • Ljubica Erickson - key to the Edinburgh Conversations, the 1980s roundtable discussions between Soviet and Nato military that are credited with helping end the cold war. [67]
  • Audrey Henshall (cairns expert), expert on Neolithic chambered cairns. [68]
  • Tina May (singer) - Jazz singer with an openness to many ways of making music and a gift for imparting a beguiling freshness to classic material.[69]
  • Margaret Curtis (megalith expert) - Megalith enthusiast who did much to further understanding of the Calanais stone circle and other ancient sites of the Isle of Lewis. [70]
  • Marie Weir, PE teacher and hockey coach. Born: 3 June 1926 in Chapelbank, Findo Gask, Perthshire. Died: 27 February 2022 in Kinross, aged 95. [71]
  • Denise Coffey (actor) - Actor and comedian who invested her many stage and screen roles with incomparable zest and cheek. [72]
  • Angela Crow (actor) - Early Coronation Street cast member who left the soap to ‘see the world’ and became a busy character actor on screen and stage. [73]
  • Claire MacGregor (teacher), teacher of pronunciation to international students. Born: 21 August, 1932 in Inchinnan, Renfrewshire. Died: 9 January, 2022 in Edinburgh, aged 89. [74]
  • Josephine Veasey, Mezzo-soprano with a commanding presence as Bizet’s Carmen, Berlioz’s Dido and Wagner’s Fricka at Covent Garden. [75]
  • Val Robinson, One of England’s best hockey players known for her trademark body swerve and for winning the BBC’s Superstars competition. [76]
  • Fiona Denison, Professor of Translational Obstetrics at the University of Edinburgh and Honorary Consultant Obstetrician at NHS Lothian.[77]
  • Shirley McGreal, Founder of the International Primate Protection League who campaigned to prevent wildlife trafficking. [78]
  • Lalage Bown, Adult educationist whose anthology Two Centuries of African English helped transform approaches to literature in the continent.[79]checkY
  • Frances Iron - School teacher and stage director in Dundee and Fife. [80]
  • Catherine Walker - Curator of the War Poets Collection at Edinburgh Napier University.[81]
  • Francesca Inskipp - [82] [83] [84] [85] [86] [87]
  • Kate Durie - academic who shared her love of English language and literature. [88]
  • Margaret Maclean - civil servant who helped establish National Museum of Scotland. [89]
  • Gwyn Singleton - pioneer of dyslexia education in the west of Scotland in the 1970s.[90]
  • Alma Cullen, scriptwriter spanning more than 40 years, with credits including Inspector Morse, and one of her plays won a silver award at the New York TV festival. [91]
  • Theodora di Marco, popular Scottish-born salonista. Theo played the viola and her twin Norma became a professional cello player and helped to found the Edinburgh Chamber Orchestra. [92]
  • Elizabeth Blackadder - renowned painter and printmaker who became the first woman to be elected to both the Royal Scottish Academy and the Royal Academy. [93]
  • Helen Nicolson (child psychiatrist), child psychiatrist. [94]stub article
  • Colette O’Neil - Stage, screen and radio actor whose roles ranged from Hedda Gabler to a Coronation Street social worker. [95]
  • Clare Peploe, film writer and director from family of Scottish artists.[96]
  • Pat Semple - With the death of Pat Semple, Scotland has lost a highly accomplished and expressive artist. For over 40 years her paintings, drawings and prints earned her a glowing reputation and many admirers. She was also an inspirational teacher in schools across Scotland.[97]
  • Helen Smeed - Long-time parliamentary researcher and personal assistant in the House of Lords.[98]
  • Sue Hayes - Film and TV consultant, producer and researcher who knew the industry inside out. Head of the London Film Commission (now Film London). [99]
  • Iona McGregor - Author, teacher, brave and inspirational pioneer in the struggle for gay rights that got under way in the 1970s. Working with others in the Scottish Minorities Group, she helped to create safe spaces in Edinburgh in which women could meet socially, and to develop a befriending service for those emerging, blinking, “out of the shadows”, in the tabloid speak of the day. [100]
  • Barbara Hulme - the first botanist to produce experimental hybrids in the genus Atriplex. In recognition, the Canadian botanist PM Taschereau named a later hybrid after her: Atriplex X hulmeana. [101]
  • Joyce Lishman - a leader in social work education and research. In 1993 she was appointed the first female professor at Robert Gordon University (RGU) in Aberdeen, where she led the school of applied social science until her retirement in 2011. [102]
  • Phillida Nicholson, a former land girl she was a talented landscape painter, printmaker and tapestry maker, and an intrepid traveller.[103]
  • Cynthia Midgley - born in Calcultta, Cynthia was a professional viola player with various quartets and chamber orchestras in the 1940s and early 50s and, after a break to raise her family, returned to music in the 70s and 80s with the Scottish Baroque Ensemble and the Scottish Chamber Orchestra before her retirement.[104]
  • Audrey Walker, textile artist who was renowned for embroideries built up from pointillist layers of thread – machine and hand-stitched. Her finest works, seen at a retrospective exhibition in 2000 at Ruthin Craft Centre in north Wales, were created after her retirement from teaching in the late 1980s. Psychologically unsettling, Walker’s haunting embroideries led Philip Hughes, the centre’s director, to observe: “If Virginia Woolf had stitched, this is what it would be like.”[105]
  • Bea Ewart, Beatrice (Bea) Ewart was a primary school teacher who believed that craft and play would expand small minds into big imaginations.[106]
  • Joan Davidson - Head of Learning at Edinburgh Science, the charitable organisation behind the annual Edinburgh Science Festival. An inspirational figure dedicated to inspiring young people. being worked on by Eleanor.[107]
  • Vera Carstairs - Research social scientist in the civil service. She devoted her studies to illuminating links between social and economic deprivation and poor health.[108].
  • Alanna Knight - novelist who worked in multiple genres.[109]
  • Stella Tennant - Model who rose to fame in the 1990s, capturing the attention of Karl Lagerfeld and gracing the pages of Vogue.[110]
  • Marjory Dougal - respected Edinburgh Youth Orchestra administrator. [111]- being worked on by Kathy
  • Anne Curry was a theatre set and costume designer who used her beautiful illustrations to inspire students in theatre design.[112]
  • Helen Cargill Thompson, librarian and art collector. [113]
  • Margaret Donaldson, Scottish child development expert.[114]
  • Erin Wall, soprano who delighted audiences at the Edinburgh Festival and the Proms. [115]
  • Marilyn Imrie, radio drama producer and theatre director.[116]
  • Eileen McCamley, deputy principal of Edinburgh’s Mary Erskine School.[117]
  • Mairi Robinson devoted her career to preserving the Scots language. [118]
  • Dr. Runa Mackay, paediatrician and peace campaigner who dedicated much of her life to the people of Palestine. [119]
  • Ethel Douglas, Assistant Secretary of the Law Society and first female Elder of Greenside Parish Church in Edinburgh.[120]
  • Aileen Christianson, feminist academic and author.[121]
  • Kristin Linklater, Scot who helped global stars find their voice.[122]
  • Christine Nuttall worked for four decades in the field of teaching English as a foreign language (TEFL), in eight countries across the world. [123].
  • Margaret Meek Spencer - Educationist who saw a child’s joy in the story as the key to learning to read.[124]
  • Cecily Giles CBE, wartime codebreaker and university secretary.[125].
  • Bridget Martyn, renowned encyclopedist. She was senior editorial manager of OUP’s Oxford Illustrated Encyclopaedia (1993), and then editor in chief between 1993 and 1995 of Microsoft’s first foray into digital encyclopedia, Encarta.[126]
  • Monica Jackson was a mountaineer whose passion for the peaks was nurtured by her childhood in India and her adulthood in Scotland. Among her most notable feats was her participation, in the 1950s, in the first all-female expedition to the Himalayas, about which she wrote a book. [127]
  • Dame Denise Coia, Scottish clinical psychiatrist.[128].
  • Ailsa Maxwell, historian and Enigma codebreaker, who witnessed Nazi surrender message.[129].
  • Mary Stewart, Scottish teacher who inspired generations with her musical gifts.[130]
  • Marista Leishman, biographer and daughter of Lord Reith.[131]
  • Jennifer Hamilton, Church of Scotland Depute Solicitor and Girl Guide leader.[132]
  • Rita Thomson was a nurse who dedicated herself to looking after the composer Benjamin Britten in the last few years of his life.
  • Victoria Braithwaite - The Penn State University scientist was known for her work on fish’s perception of pain.[133]
  • Anna Quayle - Multitalented actor best remembered as Baroness Bomburst in Chitty Chitty Bang Bang.[134].
  • Carole Satyamurti - Poet and sociologist who retold the Mahabharata in verse.[135]
  • Margaret Thomson OBE, Chief Executive Nurse for Scotland, church elder and patron of the arts.[136]
  • Diana Henderson, WRAC officer, horsewoman and historian.[137]
  • Angela Wrapson, arts consultant, curator, teacher, former chair of Traverse Theatre. [138].
  • Marion Miller, obstetrics and gynaecology specialist in Edinburgh hospitals.[139]
  • Judith Kerr, author and illustrator best known for the classic children’s book The Tiger Who Came to Tea. [140]
  • Lady Betty Lockwood - First chair of the Equal Opportunities Commission who later campaigned to increase the number of female Labour MPs. [141]
  • Doreen Spooner - First female staff photographer on a British national newspaper.[142]
  • Ruth Marchant - Pioneer in the field of children’s rights who helped the very young give evidence in court and to the police.[143]- being worked on by Lilinaz.
  • Dawn Flockhart, former athlete and NLP practitioner, remembered as a force of nature.[144]
  • Chris Highham, teacher. [145]
  • Wendy Ramshaw, pioneering artist who pushed the boundaries of jewellery, sculpture, installation and design. [146]
  • Carol Rhodes - Artist who created in her paintings a unique style of landscape, both traditionally beautiful and unsettling in subject.[147]
  • Lady Jean Trumpington, peer who was a codebreaker at Bletchley Park during the second world war.[148]
  • Janet Paisley, award-winning novelist, poet and playwright.[149]
  • Pauline Knowles, award-winning actress at the heart of Scottish theatre for nearly 30 years. [150]
  • Ana-Maria Wilson, language teacher and student.[151]
  • Inge Borkh - Operatic soprano with a powerful voice, who captivated postwar audiences.[152]
  • DameGillian Lynne - Choreographer and dancer who breathed new life into musical theatre with the hit shows Cats and The Phantom of the Opera.[153].
  • Maria Bueno - Graceful Brazilian tennis player who won Wimbledon three times.[154]
  • Wanda Wiłkomirska - Violinist who specialised in the works of her Polish compatriots [155]
  • Edith Macarthur - Stage and screen actor who played Elizabeth Cunningham in the Scottish TV soap opera Take the High Road.[156]
  • Mary Maclean, artist, lecturer, Outside Architecture founding member.[157]
  • Jo Beddoe, was an unsung heroine of British regional theatre who was responsible for the rescue in the 1980s of the 7:84 theatre company in Scotland and in the early 2000s of the Everyman and Playhouse theatres in Liverpool.[158]being worked on by Ian.
  • Marianne Ferguson Rice was a teacher turned social worker who in later life worked with a disability charity in São Paulo, Brazil, before returning to Britain to serve Quaker causes.[159]
  • Margot Cruft, inspirational oboist and teacher who loved to play music with others.[160]
  • Kay Blair, former chair of Scottish Housing Regulator.[161]
  • June Rose - Biographer and author who wrote about Modigliani, Marie Stopes and Elizabeth Fry. [162]being worked on by Marnie.
  • Mary Sudbury was a trailblazing female engineer. In 1954, straight from university, she joined the Royal Aircraft Establishment at Farnborough, Hampshire, where she worked in the wind tunnels on the development of the supersonic airliner Concorde.[163]
  • Joan McLean was Leading Wren 45270, serving in Scarborough, north Yorkshire, at HMS Paragon, an onshore listening base. She played a vital role keeping the wartime codebreaking centre at Bletchley Park, Buckinghamshire, supplied with morse code from German submarines.[164]
  • Elizabeth Marian Meehan, academic.[165]
  • Nicola Gordon Bowe - Art historian who specialised in the Irish Celtic revival.[166]
  • Lindsay Riddoch - ardent and articulate advocate for better mental health services. [167]being worked on by Morag.
  • Miriam Kochan was an inspiring teacher, author and leader in the Oxford Jewish community.[168]
  • Patricia Hiddleston, Scots mathematician and teacher who helped shape education in Africa.[169]
  • Ethel Simpson, pioneering and inspirational Scottish journalist.[170]
  • Ethel May Houston, Bletchley Park veteran, solicitor, Law Society Council member, entertaining hostess.[171]
  • Professor Tessa Holyoake, world-renowned expert in Chronic Myeloid Leukaemia, clinician, mountain biker and cake lover.[172]
  • Frances Colquhoun was a singer, actor, theatre director, artist and friend of Soviet dissidents. One of the high points of her career was the creation in 1981, with her husband, Patrick, of One Word of Truth, a film dramatisation of Alexander Solzhenitsyn’s 1970 Nobel prize lecture.[173]
  • Marion Macleod was an academic microbiologist and medical sociologist. She was also a fine example of the benefits of the postwar policy of opening up higher education to bright students from all backgrounds. [174] - being worked on by Emilia.
  • Atsuko Betchaku, teacher and pacifist.[175]
  • Sources[edit]

    Suggested sources:[edit]

    General[edit]
    News sources[edit]
    Theses databases[edit]

    Outcomes[edit]

    Newly created pages[edit]

    1. Jan Dewing former Prof at Edinburgh Uni
  • Carola Macaulay woman accepted as a trader in 1710 in Edinburgh
  • Isobel Forrester ecumenist and campaigner for women to be ordained
  • Annie Elizabeth Nicholson Ireland
  • Margaret Aitken (the great witch of Balwearie)
  • Ruth Adler - Human rights and child welfare campaigner.
  • Ethel Froud - feminist and trade unionist.
  • Bridget Hill - feminist and historian.
  • Dorothy Geddes - the first woman to be appointed to a professorship of dentistry in the United Kingdom.
  • Helen Archdale - journalist, suffragist. Page improved with additional details regarding the League of Nations.
  • Frances Melville - promoter of higher education for women in Scotland and suffragist.
  • Annie Barnes (suffragist)
  • Ethel Bilbrough - First World War diarist, artist and newspaper writer.
  • Blanche Blackwell - a Jamaican heiress, mother of Chris Blackwell (founder of Island Records) and inspirational muse to Ian Fleming and Noël Coward.
  • Prunella Briance - Founder of the National Childbirth Trust and a passionate campaigner to improve the health of women and their experience in childbirth.
  • Irene Brown - Bletchley Park veteran. [176]
  • Hilda Goldwag - an artist whose work included painting, book illustration and commercial design.[1] Many of her paintings are of Glasgow life and building from the mid-to-late twentieth century.
  • Diorbhail Nic a' Bhriuthainn - a Scottish Gaelic poet and songwriter who lived on the Isle of Luing in Argyll, Scotland.
  • Agnes Finnie - an Edinburgh shopkeeper and moneylender who was executed for witchcraft on 6 March, 1645.
  • Grace Frankland - an English microbiologist. Page improved with 10,000 bytes+ of additional information.
  • Elizabeth Fish - a schoolteacher and the first elected woman president of the Educational Institute of Scotland, the oldest teacher's trade union in the world.
  • Arline Usden - journalist and editor.[177][178][179][180]
  • Sheila Kitzinger - 3000+ bytes characters added to Sheila Kitzinger's page: a British natural childbirth activist and author on childbirth and pregnancy.
  • Lady Finella - a Noblewoman and Scottish assassin who killed King Kenneth II out of revenge, based on chronicles from the 1300s.
  • Hillary Homzie - lecturer, playwright and author.
  • Mamie Magnusson - Scottish newspaper journalist and author.
  • Catherine MacLeod - Scottish Gaelic singer.
  • Olive Fraser - a Scottish poet born in Aberdeen.
  • Mary Esslemont - Aberdeen GP noted for her work with the city's poor and underprivileged and for her activism for women's rights.
  • Alice Stewart Ker - the suffragette doctor
  • Aune Krohn - Finnish writer from a family who made "Finnish" popular
  • Mary Blathwayt - suffragette.
  • Dot Allan - Scottish novelist
  • Ann Kihengu - an entrepreneur, distributor, and winner of the 2010 Africa Laureate of the Cartier Women's Initiative Awards for her work to replace the use of kerosene lamps by distributing solar lamps and solar phone chargers in Tanzania via a network of young entrepreneurs. Ann is also a member of the World Entrepreneurship Forum Think Tank. #BlackHistoryMonth
  • Jane Alexander (author)
  • Mary Andross - Scottish food chemist.
  • Emily Lloyd (chemist)
  • Caroline Pellew - chemist.
  • Mary Corner - chemist.
  • Robina F. Hardy - author.
  • Mary D. Rosengarten - author.
  • Cecilie French - chemist and lecturer.
  • Mrs E. H. Thompson - author.
  • Phoebe Blyth - Scottish philanthropist, educationist and campaigner for the opening up of opportunities for womrn in professional employment and university education.
  • Marian Reeves - feminist activist.
  • Gerardine Macpherson - 19th-century English biographer and illustrator.
  • Mary Leman Grimstone - writer and social reformer.
  • Mary Tuck - social scientist and civil servant.
  • Margaret Troup Gray - teacher, translator and missionary.
  • Maud Galt - accused of witchcraft in Kilbarchan, Scotland.
  • Christian Caldwell - crossdressing witch-hunter in Morayshire, Scotland.
  • Margaret Mylne - Scottish suffragette and writer.
  • Kitty Kenney - English suffragette, sister of Annie Kenney.
  • Barbara Baehr - German arachnologist.
  • Annie Murray (Spanish Civil War nurse). checkY
  • Euphame MacCalzean - accused witch, executed in Edinburgh in 1591.checkY
  • Marion Conacher, missionary
  • Shu-Fang Lai, Dickens scholar
  • Elspeth Green, heroic WAAF from Edinburgh, appeared as a new article at Did You Know in Jan 2022
  • Period underwear
  • Joy Ferguson, ATA pilot
  • Highland Stoneware, Scottish craft pottery
  • Improved pages[edit]

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