Abstract
As their father grew older, visitors arrived, including the physicist Fornier d’Albe and the astronomer Robert Ball. Johnstone Stoney died in July 1911, and they took his ashes to Dublin to be interred at their mother’s grave. Soon afterwards, Florence and Edith moved from Notting Hill to a new four-bedroom house in Hampstead Garden Suburb. They bought a car and started gardening. Edith gained a position on the LSMW School Committee in 1909, allowing her to argue her case for improved physics facilities and staffing. As the student numbers increased, she felt increasing pressure and took a year’s sick leave. Staff retention was difficult, blamed by Edith on inadequate rates of pay for the demonstrators. Eventually it came to a head in March 1915 when Edith was asked by the principal, Louisa Aldrich-Blake, to tender her resignation. She was replaced by Mary Waller, a previous physics demonstrator. Stress arose from events outside the LSMW also. The Irish Home Rule Bill threatened to cause civil war in Ireland. The declaration of war against Germany in August 1918 led to Florence’s departure to Antwerp and then to Cherbourg, leaving Edith anxious for her safety.
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Notes
- 1.
He is referring the Parsons’ ‘auxetophone’, a device for sound amplification which did not cause the harmonic distortion associated with a purely mechanical gramophone. Sound was produced by controlling the flow of compressed air through a valve. The design was superseded once amplification was possible by electronic means.
- 2.
At the 1911 census on 2 April 1911, Gertrude and Gerald were staying with Florence Gladstone at 19 Chepstow Villa, very close to their father’s house in Chepstow Terrace.
- 3.
Edward Parnell Culverwell (1855–1931) married Edith Fitzgerald, second daughter of Johnstone Stoney’s elder sister Anne. He was a mathematician and Professor of Education at Trinity College, Dublin, who endorsed the child-centred Montessori approach to education.
- 4.
Gerald Stoney resigned from C.A. Parsons and Co. on 30 June 1912.
- 5.
Bindon’s only son George died a few months before him, from tuberculosis, aged 28, on a visit to Robert in Australia.
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Thomas, A., Duck, F. (2019). Challenge and Loss. In: Edith and Florence Stoney, Sisters in Radiology. Springer Biographies. Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-16561-1_8
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