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Ethna Gaffney

Ethna Elizabeth (née O’Malley) Gaffney (6 May 1920 – 29 September 2011) was an Irish professor and scientist. She was the first female professor at the Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland, holding the position for over twenty years from 1967–1987.

Prof. Ethna Gaffney
Born
Ethna Elizabeth O’Malley

(1920-05-06)May 6, 1920
DiedSeptember 29, 2011(2011-09-29) (aged 91)
Alma materUniversity College Galway, University College Dublin
Known forFirst female professor at the Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland,

Early life and education edit

Ethna Elizabeth O'Malley was born on 6 May 1920 in Galway to Christina (nee Ryan) and Michael O’Malley, a Professor of Surgery.[1] Her siblings included Eoin (1919-2007), Sheila and Brian.[2] A maternal aunt was Irish Nationalist and chemist Phyllis Ryan (Phyllis Bean Uí Cheallaigh), second wife of Seán T. O'Kelly, President of Ireland.[3]

O'Malley was educated at the Dominican Convent, Galway and Loreto Abbey, Rathfarnham, in Co. Dublin. After taking a BSc (1940) at University College Galway, she moved to University College Dublin for postgraduate study in Biochemistry, where she worked under E. J. Conway.

She earned an MSc (1941) for work on elaborating micro-diffusion biochemical techniques for the determination of ammonia. She obtained a research scholarship from the Medical Research Council of Ireland to work between 1941 and 1944 on the development of a microdiffusion technique for the determination of blood glucose; her PhD (1945) was awarded for a thesis on the interchange of electrolytes across the yeast cell membrane during fermentation.

Early career edit

In September 1944, on the inauguration of the Dietetics Course in St Mary's College of Domestic Science, Cathal Brugha Street, she was appointed to design and deliver the science programme, lecturing in Chemistry, Biochemistry, Bacteriology, Physiology and Nutrition in Health.

Subsequent to her marriage (August 1947) she resigned from this position in March 1948. Suddenly widowed in January 1952 following a plane crash, she was obliged to return to work. In September of that year she was awarded a 3-year Lasdon Research Fellowship in Bacteriology, where she worked with Vincent Barry, Director of the Medical Research Council of Ireland laboratories, Trinity College Dublin, on the chemotherapy of tuberculosis. In addition, she lectured on dietetics to 2nd-year Social Science students at Trinity.

Her official association with the Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland (RCSI) began in the academic year 1952–53, when she was appointed External Examiner in Chemistry and Physics to the College. In the spring of 1954, she lectured in Chemistry while Rae was on sick leave, and finally joined the staff as lecturer in Chemistry and Physics in September 1954. She was appointed first female Professor of Chemistry and Physics and Director of the Department of Chemistry and Physics in 1961 and remained at RCSI until her retirement in 1987.[4]

Career as a female academic edit

Gaffney's career is both typical and atypical of the professional profile of married women academics in mid- to late twentieth-century Ireland. Given the social and cultural pressures on wives not to work outside the home, there is frequently a hiatus when women left work to look after children. Once married, Ethna Gaffney resigned from her first lectureship. Suddenly widowed less than five years later, she managed successfully to combine childrearing with the world of work — a particularly male world. She was very proud of being the first woman to be promoted professor in Surgeons[4] and used to recall formal dinners and honorary conferrings where she was the only woman present in a room full of men. This would not have intimidated her, as her older brother, Eoin O’Malley, was a surgeon, later to serve as President of the RCSI.[5] In mid-twentieth-century Ireland, it was rare for a woman to have done a PhD, and still rarer a PhD in Science. Nothing in her early education had pointed Ethna O’Malley in the direction she took; she had not studied Science at school. She used to say that she opted for a BSc degree because the queue was the shortest at registration. Perhaps her family background played a role too: her father was Professor of Surgery in Galway and had three medical brothers; a maternal aunt Phyllis Ryan had done an MSc in Chemistry and was a public analyst.[3]

Ethna proved to have aptitude. After a promising start to her career (NUI entrance scholarship, brilliant undergraduate results, a completed doctorate at the age of 24), her research output is heavily weighted to the early years. Accounts of her investigations for and with E. J. Conway and Vincent Barry appeared, some co-authored, in Nature magazine, in The Biochemical Journal, The Lancet and The Irish Journal of Medical Science.[6] However, there is no record of further research publications. This discontinuity in research profile may have been typical of the age, and can be partly ascribed to the lack of incentives for full-time teaching academics to carry out research.

Teaching edit

Ethna Gaffney's teaching commitments were confined to the pre-medical year. Perhaps even more pertinently, her particular domestic circumstances vitiated any research projects she might have entertained. Plunged into widowhood as a young mother of 31 with three children under the age of 3, she faced a heavy workload involving daily lectures and labs and meeting the needs of large classes of students from a wider range of cultures than would have been found in other Irish institutions of higher learning. Combining such pressures with lone parenting was not easy. For a number of personal and professional reasons, then, Ethna's teaching and administration duties were inevitably prioritised over research activities. These gender-related constraints and discontinuities, still relevant, are only now being fully recognised and addressed. Taken as a whole, her career trajectory also illustrates the way wives can often become involved, unseen, in behind-the-scenes work to assist their husbands.

In Ethna Gaffney's case, it was behind-the-scenes work that gave her link with the RCSI a valued continuity. She had been unofficially associated with the college, as a married woman, for several years before she sought full-time employment there as a widow. She told the tale of how she came to assist the RCSI external examiner in chemistry and physics, her husband, Jim Gaffney, who was a pathologist lecturing in Trinity. A couple of months before they were married, Alan O’Meara suggested to the engaged couple that Ethna could "work extramurally" for Jim. O’Meara, as RCSI's outgoing extern in chemistry and physics, wanted to propose Jim for this job. In his view, they would make an ideal husband and wife team: Jim was a fellow of the Royal College of Physicians, the essential qualification, but his wife would be able to correct the scripts in chemistry and physics at home, as well as coach him for the orals in Physics. Jim Gaffney was duly appointed as an external examiner at RCSI from 1948 until he was killed in a plane crash in January 1952.[1]

The work was onerous (for Ethna), but (to quote her) "it paid very well, and Jim did enjoy attending the Charter Day dinners …". After Jim's death, O’Meara proposed her name as extern and, despite not being a fellow of the Royal College of Physicians, she was appointed. That association with the RCSI — both unofficial and official — was perhaps a key factor tipping the balance in favour of the RCSI when, in 1954, she was faced with a choice between returning to UCD's Biochemistry Department (as Conway was urging her to do) and taking up the offer of a lectureship at the RCSI.

Personal life edit

Ethna Elizabeth O'Malley married Dr James C. (Jim) Gaffney in August 1947. The couple had four children, Patrick, Eoin, Michael and Phyllis.[2] Their eldest son Patrick died in a drowning accident in October 1951 aged only three. Jim Gaffney was killed on 10 January 1952 in Snowdonia, in the first Aer Lingus plane crash.[7] Ethna was pregnant at the time and gave birth to a premature daughter, Phyllis Gaffney, who was moved to Temple Street Children's Hospital in Dublin where she was the first incubator baby.[1]

Death and legacy edit

Ethna Gaffney died in Dublin on 29 September 2011.[2] She was buried at Glasnevin Cemetery.[2]

In 2017 the Royal College of Surgeons commissioned an oil painting of Gaffney from portrait artist Vera Klute.[8][9]

In 2018, the Teaching laboratory in Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland was named after Ethna in honour of the service to the college and her dedication to teaching.[10] The Ethna Gaffney Award is awarded by the RCIS to the student who achieves the best aggregate mark across all modules in their Foundation Year.[11]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Finn, Clodagh (13 January 2024). "Clodagh Finn: Ethna Gaffney was an academic trailblazer who introduced first dietetics course". Irish Examiner. Retrieved 13 January 2024.
  2. ^ a b c d "GAFFNEY, Ethna : Death". Irish Times Family Notices. Retrieved 13 January 2024.
  3. ^ a b "Seán T. Ó Ceallaigh and the Ryans of Tomcoole papers, 1854-1983". National Library of Ireland catalogue. 1970. Retrieved 13 January 2024.
  4. ^ a b "Female firsts". www.rcsi.com. Retrieved 13 January 2024.
  5. ^ "Professor Eoin O'Malley (1919-2007): a personal tribute". www.rcsi.com. 1 May 2007. Retrieved 13 January 2024.
  6. ^ Barry, VincentC, MichaelL Conalty, and Ethna Gaffney (1953). ""ISONIAZID-RESISTANT STRAINS OF MYCOBACTERIUM TUBERCULOSIS." The Lancet 261.6768 (1953): 978-979". The Lancet. 262 (6768): 253–254. doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(53)90182-2.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  7. ^ "ASN Aircraft accident Douglas C-47B-35-DK Dakota 3 EI-AFL Cwm Edno, Wales". aviation-safety.net. Retrieved 13 January 2024.
  8. ^ "Professor Ethna Gaffney RCSI, | Portraits". Vera Klute. Retrieved 13 January 2024.
  9. ^ "Doing the Rounds". issuu. Retrieved 13 January 2024.
  10. ^ Irish Chemical News. "The Journal of the Institute of Chemistry of Ireland" (PDF). chemistryireland.org. Irish Chemical Society.
  11. ^ "Student academic awards offered by the School of Medicine". www.rcsi.com. Retrieved 13 January 2024.

ethna, gaffney, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, need, reorganization, comply, with, wikipedia, layout, guidelines, please, help, editing,. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article may be in need of reorganization to comply with Wikipedia s layout guidelines Please help by editing the article to make improvements to the overall structure May 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed February 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message Ethna Elizabeth nee O Malley Gaffney 6 May 1920 29 September 2011 was an Irish professor and scientist She was the first female professor at the Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland holding the position for over twenty years from 1967 1987 Prof Ethna GaffneyBornEthna Elizabeth O Malley 1920 05 06 May 6 1920GalwayDiedSeptember 29 2011 2011 09 29 aged 91 DublinAlma materUniversity College Galway University College DublinKnown forFirst female professor at the Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Early career 3 Career as a female academic 4 Teaching 5 Personal life 6 Death and legacy 7 ReferencesEarly life and education editEthna Elizabeth O Malley was born on 6 May 1920 in Galway to Christina nee Ryan and Michael O Malley a Professor of Surgery 1 Her siblings included Eoin 1919 2007 Sheila and Brian 2 A maternal aunt was Irish Nationalist and chemist Phyllis Ryan Phyllis Bean Ui Cheallaigh second wife of Sean T O Kelly President of Ireland 3 O Malley was educated at the Dominican Convent Galway and Loreto Abbey Rathfarnham in Co Dublin After taking a BSc 1940 at University College Galway she moved to University College Dublin for postgraduate study in Biochemistry where she worked under E J Conway She earned an MSc 1941 for work on elaborating micro diffusion biochemical techniques for the determination of ammonia She obtained a research scholarship from the Medical Research Council of Ireland to work between 1941 and 1944 on the development of a microdiffusion technique for the determination of blood glucose her PhD 1945 was awarded for a thesis on the interchange of electrolytes across the yeast cell membrane during fermentation Early career editIn September 1944 on the inauguration of the Dietetics Course in St Mary s College of Domestic Science Cathal Brugha Street she was appointed to design and deliver the science programme lecturing in Chemistry Biochemistry Bacteriology Physiology and Nutrition in Health Subsequent to her marriage August 1947 she resigned from this position in March 1948 Suddenly widowed in January 1952 following a plane crash she was obliged to return to work In September of that year she was awarded a 3 year Lasdon Research Fellowship in Bacteriology where she worked with Vincent Barry Director of the Medical Research Council of Ireland laboratories Trinity College Dublin on the chemotherapy of tuberculosis In addition she lectured on dietetics to 2nd year Social Science students at Trinity Her official association with the Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland RCSI began in the academic year 1952 53 when she was appointed External Examiner in Chemistry and Physics to the College In the spring of 1954 she lectured in Chemistry while Rae was on sick leave and finally joined the staff as lecturer in Chemistry and Physics in September 1954 She was appointed first female Professor of Chemistry and Physics and Director of the Department of Chemistry and Physics in 1961 and remained at RCSI until her retirement in 1987 4 Career as a female academic editGaffney s career is both typical and atypical of the professional profile of married women academics in mid to late twentieth century Ireland Given the social and cultural pressures on wives not to work outside the home there is frequently a hiatus when women left work to look after children Once married Ethna Gaffney resigned from her first lectureship Suddenly widowed less than five years later she managed successfully to combine childrearing with the world of work a particularly male world She was very proud of being the first woman to be promoted professor in Surgeons 4 and used to recall formal dinners and honorary conferrings where she was the only woman present in a room full of men This would not have intimidated her as her older brother Eoin O Malley was a surgeon later to serve as President of the RCSI 5 In mid twentieth century Ireland it was rare for a woman to have done a PhD and still rarer a PhD in Science Nothing in her early education had pointed Ethna O Malley in the direction she took she had not studied Science at school She used to say that she opted for a BSc degree because the queue was the shortest at registration Perhaps her family background played a role too her father was Professor of Surgery in Galway and had three medical brothers a maternal aunt Phyllis Ryan had done an MSc in Chemistry and was a public analyst 3 Ethna proved to have aptitude After a promising start to her career NUI entrance scholarship brilliant undergraduate results a completed doctorate at the age of 24 her research output is heavily weighted to the early years Accounts of her investigations for and with E J Conway and Vincent Barry appeared some co authored in Nature magazine in The Biochemical Journal The Lancet and The Irish Journal of Medical Science 6 However there is no record of further research publications This discontinuity in research profile may have been typical of the age and can be partly ascribed to the lack of incentives for full time teaching academics to carry out research Teaching editEthna Gaffney s teaching commitments were confined to the pre medical year Perhaps even more pertinently her particular domestic circumstances vitiated any research projects she might have entertained Plunged into widowhood as a young mother of 31 with three children under the age of 3 she faced a heavy workload involving daily lectures and labs and meeting the needs of large classes of students from a wider range of cultures than would have been found in other Irish institutions of higher learning Combining such pressures with lone parenting was not easy For a number of personal and professional reasons then Ethna s teaching and administration duties were inevitably prioritised over research activities These gender related constraints and discontinuities still relevant are only now being fully recognised and addressed Taken as a whole her career trajectory also illustrates the way wives can often become involved unseen in behind the scenes work to assist their husbands In Ethna Gaffney s case it was behind the scenes work that gave her link with the RCSI a valued continuity She had been unofficially associated with the college as a married woman for several years before she sought full time employment there as a widow She told the tale of how she came to assist the RCSI external examiner in chemistry and physics her husband Jim Gaffney who was a pathologist lecturing in Trinity A couple of months before they were married Alan O Meara suggested to the engaged couple that Ethna could work extramurally for Jim O Meara as RCSI s outgoing extern in chemistry and physics wanted to propose Jim for this job In his view they would make an ideal husband and wife team Jim was a fellow of the Royal College of Physicians the essential qualification but his wife would be able to correct the scripts in chemistry and physics at home as well as coach him for the orals in Physics Jim Gaffney was duly appointed as an external examiner at RCSI from 1948 until he was killed in a plane crash in January 1952 1 The work was onerous for Ethna but to quote her it paid very well and Jim did enjoy attending the Charter Day dinners After Jim s death O Meara proposed her name as extern and despite not being a fellow of the Royal College of Physicians she was appointed That association with the RCSI both unofficial and official was perhaps a key factor tipping the balance in favour of the RCSI when in 1954 she was faced with a choice between returning to UCD s Biochemistry Department as Conway was urging her to do and taking up the offer of a lectureship at the RCSI Personal life editEthna Elizabeth O Malley married Dr James C Jim Gaffney in August 1947 The couple had four children Patrick Eoin Michael and Phyllis 2 Their eldest son Patrick died in a drowning accident in October 1951 aged only three Jim Gaffney was killed on 10 January 1952 in Snowdonia in the first Aer Lingus plane crash 7 Ethna was pregnant at the time and gave birth to a premature daughter Phyllis Gaffney who was moved to Temple Street Children s Hospital in Dublin where she was the first incubator baby 1 Death and legacy editEthna Gaffney died in Dublin on 29 September 2011 2 She was buried at Glasnevin Cemetery 2 In 2017 the Royal College of Surgeons commissioned an oil painting of Gaffney from portrait artist Vera Klute 8 9 In 2018 the Teaching laboratory in Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland was named after Ethna in honour of the service to the college and her dedication to teaching 10 The Ethna Gaffney Award is awarded by the RCIS to the student who achieves the best aggregate mark across all modules in their Foundation Year 11 References edit a b c Finn Clodagh 13 January 2024 Clodagh Finn Ethna Gaffney was an academic trailblazer who introduced first dietetics course Irish Examiner Retrieved 13 January 2024 a b c d GAFFNEY Ethna Death Irish Times Family Notices Retrieved 13 January 2024 a b Sean T o Ceallaigh and the Ryans of Tomcoole papers 1854 1983 National Library of Ireland catalogue 1970 Retrieved 13 January 2024 a b Female firsts www rcsi com Retrieved 13 January 2024 Professor Eoin O Malley 1919 2007 a personal tribute www rcsi com 1 May 2007 Retrieved 13 January 2024 Barry VincentC MichaelL Conalty and Ethna Gaffney 1953 ISONIAZID RESISTANT STRAINS OF MYCOBACTERIUM TUBERCULOSIS The Lancet 261 6768 1953 978 979 The Lancet 262 6768 253 254 doi 10 1016 S0140 6736 53 90182 2 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link ASN Aircraft accident Douglas C 47B 35 DK Dakota 3 EI AFL Cwm Edno Wales aviation safety net Retrieved 13 January 2024 Professor Ethna Gaffney RCSI Portraits Vera Klute Retrieved 13 January 2024 Doing the Rounds issuu Retrieved 13 January 2024 Irish Chemical News The Journal of the Institute of Chemistry of Ireland PDF chemistryireland org Irish Chemical Society Student academic awards offered by the School of Medicine www rcsi com Retrieved 13 January 2024 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ethna Gaffney amp oldid 1199210033, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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