Muriel Ritson
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Muriel Ritson | |
|---|---|
| Born | 8 July 1885 |
| Died | 8 July 1980 (aged 95) |
| Education | Greenock Academy |
| Known for | Scottish representative on the Beveridge Committee which formed the National Health Service |
Muriel Ritson CBE (1885–1980) was a career administrator and worked in the civil service.[1] Her most important position was the Scottish representative for the Department of Health on the Beveridge Committee which was responsible for creating the National Health Service of the United Kingdom.
Muriel was in born in Gourock to John Fletcher Ritson, a railway agent, and Agnes Jane Catto.[1] She attended Greenock Academy and a German finishing school.[2][unreliable source?] She always valued having been educated at a co-educational school, and worked to promote women's equality in the workplace.[2]
She began working as a social worker and rent collector for the Glasgow Workman's Dwellings Company between 1908 and 1911.[1]