Eva Hartree
Eva Hartree (née Rayner; 24 December 1873 – 9 September 1947)[1] was the first woman to be Mayor of Cambridge, in 1924–25. Early lifeHartree was born Eva Rayner in Stockport in 1873, the daughter of a Jewish doctor, Edwin Rayner and his wife Isabella.[2][3][4] Hartree read natural history at Girton College, Cambridge from 1892, completing tripos in 1895, but not graduating as women did not then proceed to graduation.[2] Also in 1895 she married William Hartree, a lecturer in engineering.[2] She was a suffragist (not a more militant suffragette).[2] Civic careerHartree was a Borough Councillor from 1921 to 1927, during which time she was the first woman to be Mayor of Cambridge in 1924–25.[2] As a result of suffering from Graves' disease, she had a short period off the council, but was again a Councillor from 1929 to 1943.[2] Hartree was elected President of the National Council of Women of Great Britain in 1933[5] and in her presidential speech in 1936, she called attention to the rise of Nazism in Germany and the treatment of non Aryan people,[6] called for a committee on broadcasting to be set up so that the organsion could have links with the BBC, and raised concerns over women being excluded from roles in the local government.[7] She served as Secretary of the Cambridge branch of the League of Nations.[5] After her husband died in 1943, she resigned from the council and moved to London, to work with refugees.[5] Personal lifeThe Hartrees had six children, only two of whom survived beyond infancy, and only one of those two to adulthood.[2] The surviving son was Douglas Rayner Hartree, who became Plummer Professor of Mathematical Physics.[2] Her niece through her brother Edwin, (who became a senior figure at the National Physical Laboratory) was geologist Dorothy Helen Rayner.[8][9] The Hartrees lived at 21 Bentley Road, Trumpington.[10] During the time after William Hartree died and Eva Hartree lived in London, the house was occupied by the scientist John Baker.[10] Her husband died in 1943, and Hartree herself died in 1947.[2] LegacyThe Clay Farm community centre in Trumpington has an Eva Hartree Hall.[11] Her photographic portrait in mayoral robes by Olive Edis is held by the National Portrait Gallery.[12] References
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