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P0486 · Persona · 1892-1983

Anne Hutchison McAllister (1892-1983), a leading speech therapist, was a founder member of the College of Speech Therapists (later the Royal College of Speech and Language Therapists) and its first President (until 1971). She was instrumental in the beginnings of the Glasgow School of Speech Therapy at Jordanhill College of Education in 1935 and her name became synonymous with speech therapy education in Glasgow.

After McAllister graduated MA from the University of Glasgow in 1917, she trained as a teacher at Stow College and was appointed lecturer in Phonetics there in 1919, and subsequently at the teacher training college at Jordanhill. She obtained BEd from the University of Glasgow 1924. She and a colleague set up the first University Speech clinic in Scotland in 1927 and the case load grew so rapidly that she started courses for the training of speech therapists in Glasgow. She established the Glasgow School of Speech Therapy in 1935 and was Director until 1964. In 1936 she began a speech clinic at the dispensary at the Royal Hospital for Sick Children, for children who had undergone operations for cleft palates and hare lips. In 1937, McAllister graduated DSc from Glagow and her seminal work ‘Clinical Studies’ was published. She became well known for her broadcasts to schools on speech.

Dr Anne McAllister was awarded an OBE in 1954.

P0496 · Persona · 1922-1995

Mary Dawson was one of the first female staff at the University of Strathclyde in the newly formed Department of Pharmaceutical Technology.

She had been a student at the Royal Technical College, Glasgow (a University of Strathclyde antecedent institution), taking the Preliminary Scientific Course in 1938, for which she won the Kinninmont Prize for best student of the year. In 1942 she returned to the College to qualify as a member of the Pharmaceutical Society. After working in community pharmacy from 1943 to 1947, she returned once more to the College to complete the ‘Major’ qualification of the Society, gaining the Pereira Medal for the best student of the year in the whole of Britain.

Dawson joined the staff of the Royal Technical College as an assistant lecturer from 1948 to 1950 and as a Wellcome Research Fellow from 1950 to 1952. She obtained her PhD from the University of Glasgow in 1954 and was promoted to lecturer in the academic year 1965/1966. She stayed in this position until 1971/1972 when she was made a Senior Lecturer in the department. In the academic year 1978/1979, Dawson was promoted to Reader of the Department of Pharmaceutics. At this time, there was much departmental re-naming within the University and this led to Dawson being made Reader of Pharmaceutics in the Department of Pharmacy in 1980/1981. She stayed in this post until 1987/1988.

While lecturing and researching at the University of Strathclyde, Mary Dawson published several works on her research and presented her work at conferences throughout the UK. She joined the National Association of Women Pharmacists, which was founded in 1905. This society aimed to help gain women recognition for their work and bring married mothers back into employment in this field.

Dr Mary Dawson gained an international reputation for research on replacing drug testing on animals with tissue culture methods which resulted in the award of two prizes: the Felix-Wankel-Tierschutz Forschungspreis in 1983, and the Marschig Animal Welfare Trust Prize in 1990. She shared the latter with Brigitte Bardot. During her long professional career she served on the Pharmaceutical Society’s Scottish Executive Department from 1971 to 1990, acting as chairman in 1979 and 1980. Her many other forms of service to her profession resulted in the award of the Pharmaceutical Society’s Charter Silver Medal in 1987. Dr Mary Dawson died in 1995.

C0480 · Entidade coletiva · 1943-1945

The Joint Provisional Council of the College of Speech Therapists was set up to prepare for the amalgamation of the Association of Speech Therapists and the British Society of Speech Therapists, and the formation of a single organisation.
The Council was formed of 9 members from each organisation, who then became the College of Speech Therapists' 18 Founder Fellows. The first meeting occurred on 02 Dec 1943.