Ethel Currie


Ethel Dobbie Currie FRSE FGS FGSG DSc was a Scottish geologist and one of the first women to be made a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh, and the first woman to receive the Society's Neill Prize.

Life and career

Ethel Dobbie Currie was born at 92 Seymour Street, Cathcart, Glasgow on 4 December 1899 to Elizabeth Laughlan Allan and James Ferguson Currie. She was a pupil of Bellahouston Academy. She graduated with a BSc from University of Glasgow in 1920 and her PhD in 1923. From 1920 she was assistant to Dr William Smellie at the Hunterian Museum.
She was also awarded an honorary doctorate in 1945.
Currie's primary research interest was in palaeontology. Her first publication was a joint paper with Professor John Gregory on fossil sea-urchins. She led a study of Scottish carboniferous goniatites.
In 1945 she became the first woman to be awarded the Neill Prize by the Royal Society of Edinburgh and in 1949, she was one of the first women to be made a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh. Her proposers were Sir Edward Battersby Bailey, John Weir, Murray Macgregor, Sir Arthur Elijah Trueman, George W. Tyrell and Thomas Neville George.
Her contributions were acknowledged by the Geological Society of London and she was awarded its Wollaston Fund.
In 1952 she was elected the first female President of the Glasgow Geological Society, in succession to Thomas Neville George. She was succeeded in turn in 1955 by Neville George in a second term of office.
Professor John Gregory invited her to assist with the care and arrangement of the geological collections in the Hunterian Museum after her graduation. She worked as assistant curator of the Museum until she retired in September 1962.
She died in Glasgow on 24 March 1963.

Publications

Ethel Currie published three books