Georgina Kermode

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Born1868
Barnet, United Kingdom
Died5 September 1923(1923-09-05) (aged 54–55)
Georgina Kermode
Born1868
Barnet, United Kingdom
Died5 September 1923(1923-09-05) (aged 54–55)

Georgina Kermode MIM (1868 – 5 September 1923) was a suffragette, metallurgist, engineering entrepreneur and holder of numerous patents. In 1916 she became the first woman member of the Institute of Metals.

Kermode was born Georgina Elizabeth Fawns in Barnet, United Kingdom in 1868, daughter of the Rev. J. Fawns, of Launceston. Her family were from Tasmania and when she was seventeen Kermode married another Tasmanian landowner Robert Crellin Kermode. She lived in Mona Vale, on a building known as Calendar House, probably as a result of its 12 chimneys.[1]

Suffrage

Career

References and sources

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI