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Date: 22-4-2017
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Date: 11-4-2017
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Died: 21 September 1937 in Edinburgh, Scotland
Chrystal Macmillan's parents were John Macmillan and Jessie Chrystal Finlayson. She was one of a family of nine children, having eight brothers. Her parents sent her as a boarder to St Leonard's School in St Andrews, a fairly new school at this time as it had been founded in 1877. Macmillan then returned to Edinburgh and began her studies at Edinburgh University first matriculating in October 1892. Before matriculating she had passed the Preliminary Examination in English, Mathematics, French, Dynamics and Science. She was one of the first women to be admitted to a university course in Scotland, since it was in 1892 that women were admitted for the first time. However, she would not be one of the first to graduate since other women had already studied university level courses and were able to graduate with an M.A. in 1893.
Macmillan studied Mathematics with Chrystal and Natural Philosophy with Tait in session 1892-93. In session 1893-94 she took Chemistry and Practical Chemistry with Drinkwater in the School of Medicine, Intermediate Honours Mathematics with Chrystal and Intermediate Honours Natural Philosophy with Knott. In the following academic year 1894-95 she studied Advanced Honours Mathematics with Chrystal, Astronomy and Practical Astronomy with Copeland, then in 1895-96 Advanced Natural Philosophy with Tait. She was awarded a B.Sc. in April 1896 becoming the first woman graduate with a degree in science from Edinburgh.
After studying at the University of Berlin over the summer of 1896, Macmillan returned to Edinburgh and matriculated in the Faculty of Arts in October 1896 after passing the Preliminary Examination in Greek. She then took courses on Moral Philosophy and Mental Philosophy in session 1896-97, Political Economy and Greek in session 1897-98, Moral Philosophy in 1898-99, and Mental Philosophy in session 1899-1900. Having already taken the Honours courses in Mathematics and Natural Philosophy in 1894-95 and 1895-96 respectively, she graduated in April 1900 with Second Class Honours in Moral Philosophy and Logic as well as First Class Honours in Mathematics and Natural Philosophy. In this she scored another first, becoming the first woman to graduate from Edinburgh with First Class Honours in Mathematics and Natural Philosophy. In addition to her academic studies, while at university she had played a major role in the Women's Debating Society, an activity which was to stand them in good stead.
After graduating Macmillan worked for the Scottish Federation of Women's Suffrage Societies, campaigning for women's rights to vote. At this time the Scottish Universities (St Andrews, Aberdeen, Glasgow and Edinburgh) elected four MPs to Parliament. Members of the General Councils of these universities formed the electorate, all 'persons' on the Councils having the right to vote. The word 'person' was used throughout the statutes. The General Councils consisted of the graduates of the four universities, and now Macmillan and many other women were graduates. However, women were denied the right to vote for the first general election in which the university seat of Edinburgh and St Andrews was contested in February 1906. She, along with other women, argued that women graduates were 'persons' and therefore allowed to vote in electing the university MPs. As honorary secretary of the Women Graduates of the Scottish Universities (Parliamentary Franchise) Committee, Macmillan brought a court action in 1906 to argue that women graduates had the right to vote as 'persons' on the General Councils. The case was lost, and their appeal was dismissed. In 1908 the case was brought before the House of Lords, the final arbiter in legal matters. Macmillan became the first woman to plead before the House of Lords [2]:-
Late in that day the case was opened by Miss Macmillan, who spoke for three-quarters of an hour. It was inevitable that the Press should refer to her as a modern Portia. The Glasgow Herald reporter added that she wore an appropriate costume with a fur necklet and a wide-brimmed hat to match her dress; that she was a little nervous at the start but warmed to the subject and that she argued law in an admirable speaking voice. Two days later the hearing was resumed and Miss Macmillan, dressed this time in a dark red costume and hat, with ermine furs, spoke for three hours with complete self-possession and great skill in exposition.
The case was rejected and Macmillan moved to London to carry on the fight for women's rights to vote. She was elected to the executive of the National Union of Women's Suffrage Societies, and also played a major role as Secretary of the International Woman Suffrage Alliance from 1913 to 1920. When war broke out in 1914 Macmillan, who strongly opposed the war, resigned from the National Union of Women's Suffrage Societies because of the position it took. Her opposition to the war took a very practical form. She was on the first boat to cross the North Sea taking a food convoy to Flushing after the fall of Antwerp. She then proposed a Women's Congress in The Hague to:-
... discuss the principles on which peace should be made and, if so agreed, to act internationally.
The conference was held in April 1915, with Macmillan one of only three British women able to attend since the North Sea was by that time closed. She was elected a member of the delegation from that Congress to present proposals to heads of neutral states for halting World War I. She then went to the United States to assist the those opposing America's entry into the war. After the war ended in 1918, Macmillan was a delegate at the International Congress of Women in Zürich in May 1919 which issued a strong condemnation of the harsh terms imposed on Germany by the Treaty of Versailles. She presented these views to the 1919 Paris Peace Conference but, as had happened so often in her life, again her views were ignored. Looking back on these events with the benefit of hindsight, we can now say that Macmillan's views have been shown to have been right.
By this time women aged 30 or over had been given the right to vote by the Representation of the People Act which was passed by the House of Commons in June 1917 and by the House of Lords in February 1918. Macmillan was now able to join the legal profession, which had been opened to women, and felt that from this position she would be better able to advance the causes in which she believed. Macmillan entered the Middle Temple, and was called to the bar on 28 January 1924 [3]:-
She was the right kind of lawyer, one who held that Law should be synonymous with Justice ... Her chief aim in life - one might call it her passion - was to give every woman of every class and nation the essential protection of justice. She was, herself, a great and very just human being ... She could not budge an inch on matters of principle but she never lost her temper and never bore a grudge in defeat.
Macmillan joined the Edinburgh Mathematical Society in May 1897 when she was reading for her M.A. at Edinburgh. She was the second woman member of the Society, joining a few months before Charlotte Scott who was the third woman member. The first woman member was Flora Philip who joined in 1886. Macmillan remained a member of the Society until 1915.
Macmillan received much recognition for her achievements. A fund was set up at Livingston House, Broadway, London, to provide an annual Chrystal Macmillan Prize for women students of Law and to support the societies with whose work she was particularly associated. A Millennial plaque is at Kings Buildings (West Mains Road), in Edinburgh. It reads:
In honour of
JESSIE CHRYSTAL MACMILLAN
1872-1937
Suffragist, founder of Women's International League for Peace and Freedom,
first woman science graduate of the University (1896).
The University of Edinburgh has also named a building in her honour. The following statement was issued by the School of Social and Political Studies:-
The School of Social and Political Studies wishes to name its newly refurbished building after Chrystal Macmillan as key aspects of her life and work relate to matters of central concern to the School including gender, international politics, human rights, personhood and social identity. The Millennial Plaque at King's Buildings erected in her honour uses her full name, Jessie Chrystal Macmillan but throughout her professional life she was invariably known as Chrystal Macmillan and the School wishes to name its refurbished building 'The Chrystal Macmillan Building'.
Her death is described in [1]:-
In June 1937 Chrystal Macmillan had to have a leg amputated. She died from heart disease at 8 Chalmers Crescent, Edinburgh, on 21 September 1937, and was cremated on 23 September in Edinburgh. In her will she left bequests to the Open Door International for the Economic Emancipation of the Woman Worker, and to the Association for Moral and Social Hygiene. A memorial prize is awarded annually in her name by the society of the Middle Temple to the highest placed woman student in the bar's final examinations.
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علامات بسيطة في جسدك قد تنذر بمرض "قاتل"
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أول صور ثلاثية الأبعاد للغدة الزعترية البشرية
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مدرسة دار العلم.. صرح علميّ متميز في كربلاء لنشر علوم أهل البيت (عليهم السلام)
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