Patricia Marcia Crawford
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Patricia Marcia Crawford , (31 January 1941 – 28 April 2009) was an Australian historian of women. She featured in a conference, ''London's Women Historians'', held at the Institute of Historical Research in 2017.


Life

Patricia Marcia Clarke was born in Sydney on 31 January 1941, first child of Enid Fussell and Jim Clarke, who was a marine surveyor. The family moved to Melbourne, where Crawford graduated from the University of Melbourne with a BA (Hons) in 1961. The following year she married anthropologist Ian Crawford and the couple moved to Perth where she enrolled in a PhD (1971) at the University of Western Australia (UWA). In 1972 she became a part-time lecturer at UWA, was made a permanent staff member in 1976 and was appointed professor of history in 1995.


Selected publications

* ''Denzil Holles 1598–1680: a study of his political career'' * "Attitudes to Menstruation in Seventeenth-century England", '' Past and Present'', 1981. *''Women and Religion in England, 1500–1720'' * ''Blood, Bodies and Families in Early Modern England'' * ''Parents of Poor Children in England 1580–1800''


Awards and recognition

Crawford's first book, ''Denzil Holles 1598–1680,'' won the 1979 Whitfield Prize. In 1981 Crawford was elected Fellow of the Royal Historical Society (UK), Fellow of the
Australian Academy of Social Sciences The Academy of the Social Sciences in Australia (ASSA) is an independent, non-governmental organisation devoted to the advancement of knowledge and research in the social sciences. It has its origins in the Social Science Research Council of Austr ...
in 1993 and Fellow of the Australian Academy of the Humanities in 2003.


References

1941 births 2009 deaths University of Melbourne alumni University of Western Australia alumni Academic staff of the University of Western Australia Australian women historians People from Sydney Fellows of the Royal Historical Society Fellows of the Australian Academy of the Humanities Fellows of the Academy of the Social Sciences in Australia {{Australia-historian-stub