Isabel Marion Weir Johnston
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Isabel Marion Weir Johnston (1883–1969), known as Marrion Kelleher (née Johnston), was the first woman to enter
Trinity College, Dublin , name_Latin = Collegium Sanctae et Individuae Trinitatis Reginae Elizabethae juxta Dublin , motto = ''Perpetuis futuris temporibus duraturam'' (Latin) , motto_lang = la , motto_English = It will last i ...
(TCD) in January 1904.


Family

Johnston was born 25 November 1883 in Derry City in Ireland to a Presbyterian family. Her father John Barr Johnston (1843 - 1919) was a knight, a merchant, as well as an alderman, mayor and justice of the peace from Tyrone. Her mother was Isabella Weir from Donegal. She had an older brother, John Alexander, who studied law, an older sister Margaret Chambers who became a secretary and a younger sister Kathleen Maude. In 1901 she applied to the
King's Inns The Honorable Society of King's Inns ( ir, Cumann Onórach Óstaí an Rí) is the "Inn of Court" for the Bar of Ireland. Established in 1541, King's Inns is Ireland's oldest school of law and one of Ireland's significant historical environment ...
, but was rejected by a small majority.


Trinity College Dublin

TCD had struggled for some time with the issue of allowing women to attend Trinity. The long serving Provost, distinguished mathematician
George Salmon George Salmon FBA FRS FRSE (25 September 1819 – 22 January 1904) was a distinguished and influential Irish mathematician and Anglican theologian. After working in algebraic geometry for two decades, Salmon devoted the last forty years of his ...
, had long opposed the admission of women. He is alleged to have said that women would only be admitted to TCD as students over his dead body. The Board voted in favour of allowing women to enter the university in 1902. In 1903, when the
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said that the Provost's assent was required, Salmon withdrew his formal objections. Coincidentally, immediately after his death on Friday, 22 January 1904, Johnston became the first woman undergraduate to succeed in registering at TCD, and by the end of year other women had done likewise. She recalled, "When I arrived in Dublin 1904, I was informed that he
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had died that day, and the examination had to be put off until after the funeral." During her first two terms, she was not allowed to attend lectures and took the terms by examination, during which she was chaperoned. Johnston was the first woman to enter TCD where she read English and French. She was followed later the same year by the next women undergraduates, Ellen Tuckey and Avarina Shegog. She founded the women's debating society, The Dublin University Elizabethan Society, in 1905. Although "an active and able student" Johnston left before finishing her degree due to ill health and marriage. She married Stephen B. Kelleher, a mathematician and Catholic from Cork, who was made a Fellow in 1904. Kelleher was the only
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Fellow in the university at the time. Kelleher became the
Erasmus Smith's Professor of Mathematics The Erasmus Smith's Professor of Mathematics at Trinity College Dublin is one of two endowed mathematics positions at Trinity College Dublin (TCD), the other being the Donegall Lectureship at Trinity College Dublin. It was founded in 1762 and fun ...
in Trinity for 1914-1917. The family later moved to England where Johnston became a founder member of the London branch of the DU Women graduates association.


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Johnston, Isabel People from Derry (city) Irish women's rights activists People associated with Trinity College Dublin 1883 births 1969 deaths