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Elsie
Dalyell 1881 - 1948 pathologist
Elsie
Jean Dalyell (1881-1948), pathologist, was born on 13 December 1881
at Newtown, Sydney, second daughter of Jean (born McGregor) and
James Melville Dalyell, mining engineer. Educated at Sydney Girls'
High School, she joined the Department of Public Instruction as
a pupil-teacher in 1897. Sponsored by the department she completed
first year arts and science at the University of Sydney. After suffering
a hysterectomy in 1905, she resigned as a teacher and transferred
to second-year medicine, graduating MB with first-class honours
(1909) and ChM (1910). She was appointed medical officer at Royal
Prince Alfred Hospital. In 1911-12 Elsie Dalyell was the first woman
on the full-time medical school staff as demonstrator in pathology,
and in 1912 the first woman elected to a Beit fellowship, which
she took up at the Lister Institute of Preventive Medicine, London.
In the war she joined Lady Wimborne's Serbian Relief Fund unit which
went to Skopje (Uskub) to help with the typhus epidemic in 1915.
Rather to her annoyance, she was safe at the Addington Park war
hospital, Croydon, when Skopje was overrun by the Bulgarians. In
1916 she joined the Scottish Women's Hospitals for Foreign Service
unit at Royaumont, France, and afterwards enlisted with the Royal
Army Medical Corps, serving in Malta and Salonika, Greece. Early
in 1919 she went to Constantinople to deal with cholera, and in
June was appointed OBE; she had been twice mentioned in despatches.
In 1919-20 she worked in Vienna as senior clinician to a research
team lead by Dr (Dame) Harriette Chick, studying deficiency disease
in children. As part of a re-education program, Drs Chick and Dalyell
presented and published scientific papers in German soon after their
arrival. In 1923 the team produced perhaps 'the most complete study'
of human rickets prophylaxis ever undertaken.
For family reasons, and in the belief that she had a duty to give
Australia the benefit of her experience, she returned in March 1923,
travelling via the United States for a lecture tour on the Vienna
research. The British regretted their loss and the Americans tried
to detain her. Ironically, there was no suitable professional opportunity
in Sydney. Without capital, her attempt at private practice in Macquarie
St failed. In 1924 she began duty as assistant microbiologist in
the Department of Public Health. There was no prospect of advancement
and her life was circumscribed by routine and Wasserman tests for
syphilis about which, thanks to her war service, she was an acknowledged
expert. Between 1925 and 1935 she was on the committee of the Rachel
Forster Hospital for Women and Children and with Dr Maisie Hamilton,
was responsible for the venereal diseases clinic which opened there
in 1927, reputedly the model for other clinics in Australia and
South Africa. She worked with the Red Cross Blood Transfusion Service
during the 1939-45 war.
She had settled in Greenwich soon after her return, sharing her
house for some years with the family of her elder sister. Another
sister joined her in the 1930s. Elsie was in ill health when she
retired in 1946; she died on 1 October 1948. All who knew her agreed
that she was one of those rare beings whom it was a privilege to
know.
Ann M. Mitchell
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