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P1188 · Pessoa · b. 1945

Glenda White trained as a primary school teacher and worked in four primary schools in England and Scotland before moving into the field of teacher training. During the 1970s and early 1980s she lectured at Callander Park College of Education and Jordanhill College of Education, where she was Senior Lecturer in Primary Education. She then joined Her Majesty’s Inspectorate in 1985, inspecting pre-five, primary and secondary schools in the West of Scotland and Dumfries and Galloway. She moved on to become Chief Inspector of the Quality Assurance Unit at Strathclyde Regional Council in 1990, then Head of School Development for South Lanarkshire Council before taking early retirement. She subsequently became acting-headteacher of a ‘failing’ school and worked as an independent educational consultant, evaluating and advising schools and education authorities on aspects of quality assurance, management and the curriculum. Having fully retired from paid employment, she completed a doctoral thesis at the University of the West of Scotland on the life and work of the Scottish educationist, David Stow. Glenda White is presently an Honorary Teaching Fellow of the University of Glasgow and an Honorary Research Fellow of the University of Strathclyde.

Fraser, William Hamish, b. 1941, historian
P1281 · Pessoa · b. 1941

William Hamish Fraser was appointed Lecturer in History at the University of Strathclyde in 1967 and became Senior Lecturer in 1977. He was Dean of the Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences from 1987 to 1993, and Professor in History from 1996 until his retirement in 2003, when he became Professor Emeritus.

Fraser obtained an undergraduate degree at the University of Aberdeen and a PhD in history at the University of Sussex in 1968.

Fraser published throughout his academic career on Scottish labour and social history. A selection of his publications include:

  • 'Trade Unions and Society: the struggle for acceptance, 1850-1880', 1974
  • 'The Coming of the Mass Market, 1850 -1914', 1981
  • 'Conflict and class: Scottish workers, 1700-1838', 1988
  • 'People and Society in Scotland', 1988
  • 'Alexander Campbell and the Search for Socialism', 1996
  • ‘A History of British Trade Unionism, 1700-1998’, 1999
  • 'Chartism in Scotland', 2010
  • 'The Wars of Archibald Forbes', 2015
  • 'The Edinburgh History of Scottish newspapers', 1850 -1950, 2023
Cape Industries Limited
C0523 · Entidade coletiva · 1893 to date

Cape Industries Ltd was registered in December 1893 as Cape Asbestos Company Ltd. It was incorporated in 1957. Its name changed to 'Cape Industries Limited' in 1974. Originally a company that specialised in mining asbestos, Cape developed asbestos-free products in the 1970s and developed a scaffolding division.

P1684 · Pessoa · c. 1920s-2012

Barbara Thatcher was a lecturer in business at the Scottish College of Commerce and then a senior lecturer in economic history at the University of Strathclyde.

Thatcher graduated with a BCom degree in history from London. In 1949, she was appointed to lecture in the business administration department at the Scottish College of Commerce. Thatcher became the College’s Adviser to Women Students in 1963. The Scottish College of Commerce merged with the University of Strathclyde in 1964 and so Thatcher joined the University and became the first woman lecturer in the economic history department. She became a senior lecturer before retiring in late September 1981. In 1982, she became an honorary lecturer in the Department of History at Strathclyde. She maintained this position until 1987.

During her retirement Thatcher made ecclesiastical history as she became one of the first Episcopal women priests to be ordained in Scotland in 1995.

She died in 2012.

Butt, John, 1929-2002, historian
P1683 · Pessoa · 1929 - 2002

John Butt B.A, PhD., was a lecturer in the Department of Industrial Administration, Royal College of Science and Technology, from 1957 until 1964 when he became a lecturer in American Economic History at the newly formed University of Strathclyde. He was a senior lecturer from 1975 to 1976 when he was appointed Professor of Economic History. He was Dean of the Faculty of Arts and Social Studies from 1978 to 1984. He was then appointed Vice Principle at the University of Strathclyde in 1988 and retired in the autumn of 1994.

Butt graduated with a BA from the University of London, subsequently gaining a PhD from the University of Glasgow. He joined the Royal College of Science and Technology in 1959 and was appointed to teach general studies with an inter-disciplinary team in the Department of Industrial Administration. The goal was to teach a range of courses including history, philosophy, geography and urban planning, and literature. In 1964, the College was given university status, and five new departments were created - Economics, Politics, Psychology, Administration and Economic and Industrial History. The Scottish College of Commerce merged with the university in 1964 and Butt introduced American Economic History. He was a senior lecturer from 1975 to 1976. Butt succeeded S. G. E Lythe as Professor of Economic History and in this role, he took on a new project – uncovering and writing the History of the University of Strathclyde. This involved case studies of individuals who made an important impact on the legacy of the university: John Anderson, David Livingstone, and Thomas Graham.

Butt served as Dean of the Faculty of Arts and Social Studies from 1978 to 1984 and Deputy Principal in 1986. On the 1st of August 1988 he was appointed Vice Principal.
He was also chairman of the governors of Craigie College, Ayr. He served on the military education committee and the general teaching council. He was elected fellow of the Royal Society of Arts and was a member of the Royal Commonwealth Society.

John Butt served the History Department at Strathclyde for 37 years, and under his management the History Department was granted an A excellence rating by the University Grants Committee. In autumn 1994 Butt retired from the University of Strathclyde. He died on 3 July 2002 at the age of 73.

A selection of publications by John Butt:

  • 'Robert Owen, Prince of Cotton Spinners' (1971) (Co-editor)
  • 'An Economic History of Scotland 1100-1939' (1975) (Co-author)
  • 'A History of the Scottish Cooperative Wholesale Society Ltd' (1981) (Co-author)
  • 'Essays in Scottish Textile History' (1987) (Co-editor)
  • 'John Anderson’s Legacy. The University of Strathclyde and its Antecedents 1796-1996' (1996)
University of Strathclyde | Department of History
C0320 · Entidade coletiva · c. 1963 -

The Department of History at Strathclyde came into being in the 1960s and rapidly developed throughout the 1960s and 1970s.

In 1959, the Department of Industrial Administration in the Royal College of Science and Technology was beginning to build up an inter-disciplinary team. By 1960 seven academics brought their individual specialisations to the staff: General Studies, Philosophy, History, Geography and Urban Planning and Literature. These staff members were: I.F. Clarke, Christopher Macrae, John Butt, Donald Gordon, Peter Green, Christopher Wiseman and Michael Gregory.

These members of staff, alongside others in the Royal College of Science and Technology, joined the campaign for university status and with it the inclusion of Arts and Social Studies. In 1961 Sir Keith Murray and the University Grants Committee (UGC) accepted the College for university status. The following year, March 1962, the Royal College saw further development, with five new departments created: Economics, Politics, Psychology, Administration and Economic History.

In 1962 Samuel George Edgar Lythe became the founding Professor of Economic History at the Royal College of Science and Technology. In 1963 five members of staff made up the Economic History department: Lythe, John Ward, Richard Wilson, Michael Sanderson, and John Moore. In 1964 the Royal College merged with the Scottish College of Commerce and became the University of Strathclyde. Two members of staff joined the Economic History Department from the College of Commerce: Tom McAloon and Barbara Thatcher. Gordon Jackson also joined in 1964, as did John Butt who introduced American Economic History to the department.

In 1974 the Senate and Court approved Lythe’s request for a new degree course: Modern History was founded in the university. The History department was then able to teach two-degree courses. John T. Ward was appointed as the first Professor of Modern History at Strathclyde. Lythe was also granted approval in 1974 to rename the department. It was no longer Economic History, but the Department of History.

P1686 · Pessoa · 1952 to date

Alistair Goldsmith was educated at Jordanhill College School, Glasgow, and Marr College, Troon, Ayrshire. In the autumn of 1970, he commenced undergraduate studies at the Scottish Hotel School, University of Strathclyde, and graduated with the degree of Bachelor of Arts in Hotel and Catering Management in 1973. He then completed a postgraduate course at Strathclyde, qualifying for the Postgraduate Diploma in Personnel Management in April 1975. After leaving university, he joined the Trust Houses Forte Hotels company as Personnel Manager for St George's Hotel, Liverpool: a post secured via Professor John Beavis at the Scottish Hotel School, who 'matched' him with the role when approached by the company. He subsequently returned to Scotland to manage the hotel at Weem, near Aberfeldy, before moving to the Queen's Hotel, Prestwick. Whilst in Prestwick, he also worked as a volunteer on the Waverley, the world's last seagoing paddle steamer. This led to a full time post as Catering Officer for the Waverley Steam Navigation Company Ltd, Glasgow, from 1978-1980. Having re-established contact with the Scottish Hotel School, he was then invited to return there in September 1980 to assist with teaching for a term. This temporary arrangement became permanent, and he remained on the staff of the Scottish Hotel School until his retirement in 2009. Whilst lecturing there, he also gained two postgraduate research degrees from the University of Strathclyde: an MLitt in History, awarded in 1985, and a PhD in History, awarded in 2002 for his thesis on 'The development of the City of Glasgow Police c.1800-c.1939.' In retirement, Dr Goldsmith is an active member of the University of Strathclyde Graduates' Association, serving as its President in 2024.

Allen, Laurie, Kazan-, b. 1947, anti-asbestos campaigner
P0818 · Pessoa · b. 1947

Laurie Kazan-Allen studied history at Brandeis University (BA 1969). She was the founding editor, in 1990, of the 'British asbestos newsletter' (BAN), a quarterly publication distributed to victim support groups, environmentalists, solicitors, academics, medical personnel and research bodies in over thirty countries. Since 1999, Kazan-Allen was the coordinator of the International Ban Asbestos Secretariat. Kazan-Allen has been the recipient of awards in recognition of her work in raising awareness of asbestos disease, and contributing to the ban of the substance. Awards include: the 'Asbestos Disease Awareness Organization Voice of the Victims, Tribute of Unity Award', April 2005; the 'Emeritus Professor Eric G. Saint Memorial Award, 2012'; the 'Construction Safety Campaign, Robert Tressel Award for services to working people', in 2013; and the 'Rachel LEE Jung-Lim Award', awarded by a confederation of Asian ban asbestos groups, 2013. Laurie Kazan-Allen's brother, Steven Kazan, was an American asbestos litigator.

Peto, Julian, b. 1945, epidemiologist
P1689 · Pessoa · b. 1945

Julian Peto was an epidemiologist whose dose-response models for asbestos-related cancers contributed directly to reducing industrial exposure levels and subsequently to the European asbestos ban, and are still the accepted basis for environmental risk assessment.

P1682 · Pessoa · b. 1958

Fernanda Giannasi was a driving force in the campaign to have asbestos banned in Brazil. She was a Civil and Occupational Safety Engineer and was a Labor Inspector for 30 years at the Brazilian Labor Ministry. She founded the GIA-Grupo Interinstitutional of Asbestos and was manager of the State Program for the Banning of Asbestos. Fernanda founded the Brazilian Association of People Exposed to Asbestos (ABREA) and was one of the creators of the CONTREN-National Commission of the Workers on Nuclear Energy.

In 2024, she was a health, labour and environmental consultant for workers' organizations and victims of industrial disease. She also coordinated the Virtual-Citizen Network for the Banning of Asbestos for Latin America and is a member of the Brazilian Environmental Justice Network. Fernanda was part of the Italian Academy of Sciences of the World (Collegium Ramazzini), which awarded her the Ramazzini Prize in 2018.

Fernanda received a number of awards in recognition of her work including the Occupational Health of the American Public Health Association (APHA) in Chicago, 1999; 'Outstanding Citizen' award by the National Progressist Entrepreneurs Basis (PBNE), 2001; the title of “Anti-Asbestos G-Woman in Tokyo in 2004; commendations from the Order of Judicial Merit of Labor from the TST-Superior Labor Court (2014) and the TRT-Regional Labor Court (2015); the FazDiferença (Makes the Difference) Prize from the prestigious Newspaper “O Globo, 2017; and the Rachel LEE Jung-Lim Award in 2017 in South Korea.

Sutherland, Margaret Millen Jeffs, b.c. 1881, chemist
P0676 · Pessoa · b. 1881

Maggie (Margaret) Sutherland was born in Glasgow on 18 October 1881. She graduated from the University of Glasgow where she was awarded the degree of Bachelor of Science (1908) and Doctor of Science (1914). Sutherland was an Asssociate of the Institute of Chemistry (AIC) becoming Fellow of the Institute of Chemistry (FIC) around 1920.

Sutherland was appointed at the Royal Technical College, Glasgow as lecturer in chemistry in 1913; and lecturer in inorganic chemistry in 1935 until she resigned in 1947.

Bunch, Antonia Janette, 1937-2023, OBE, librarian
P1642 · Pessoa · 1937-2023

Toni (Antonia) Bunch was born on 13 February 1937 in Croydon, Surrey, England, to Harold and Helen Bunch (née Wilson). Having missed out on going to university when she left school, she took an alternative route to qualify for her chosen profession. After completing correspondence courses and attending classes at Ealing Technical College, she sat and passed the Library Association’s Associateship (ALA) examination in 1960 and subsequently worked in Scotland, spending most of her career in Edinburgh, where she specialised in medical librarianship.

From 1962-1965, Toni was employed as Assistant Librarian at the Scottish Office in Edinburgh. In 1965, she was appointed as Librarian at the Scottish Health Service Centre, where she remained until 1981, establishing its library as a national resource centre for information on all aspects of healthcare management and planning. Whilst working full-time, she completed a research thesis entitled ‘Hospital and medical libraries in Scotland: an historical and sociological study’, which she successfully submitted for the Fellowship of the Library Association (FLA) in 1973 and later published as an article in Scottish Library Studies 3 (1975).

Toni went on to register as a part-time research student at the University of Strathclyde in 1974, graduating in 1976 with the degree of Master of Arts for her thesis entitled ‘Health care administration: an information sourcebook’. The thesis was published by Capital Planning Information in 1979.

From August 1981 until 1986, Toni was employed as a Lecturer in the Department of Librarianship (known from 1985 as the Department of Information Science) at the University of Strathclyde in Glasgow. She also enrolled as a part-time PhD student there in January 1982. The topic of her doctoral research was Scottish medical and scientific book collectors to the end of the eighteenth century, which she described as being a logical progression from the research undertaken for her FLA thesis in the early 1970s. In March 1987, however, she abandoned her doctoral studies without completing or submitting a thesis. That same year, she was appointed as Director of the newly created Scottish Science Library at the National Library of Scotland, Edinburgh, remaining in post until her retirement at the age of 59. She latterly lived in the village of Garvald, East Lothian, and died, aged 86 on 21 March 2023.

Toni was a Fellow of the Institute of Information Scientists, receiving its Jason Farradane Award in 1990; a Fellow of the Chartered Institute of Library and Information Professionals (a new body created when the Library Association merged with the Institute of Information Scientists in 2002); a Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland, and a Council member of the Scottish Society for the History of Medicine. During her career, she served on several national and international committees concerned with librarianship and information science. She was appointed Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) in 1996.