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Name someone worth a google

72 replies

whatausername · 02/01/2025 13:45

Name someone we can google and learn about.

I pick Catherine Trotter Cockburn: she was an early woman writer who focussed on morality and philosophy too but also wrote some stories. The Adentures of a Young Lady (aka Olinda's Adventures) was published in 1693 as a teenager. Yet her legacy is underserved.

Can be anyone at all!

OP posts:
Sallymaclennane · 03/01/2025 13:21

MrsSethGecko · 03/01/2025 11:59

James Barry, surgeon. A woman who disguised herself as a man and was only found out to be female on her death.

James Barry is one of my ancestors😃
Francis Sheehy Skeffington and his wife Hanna Sheehy. They were huge proponents of equality for women.
Francis Sheehy Skeffington also played a part in the Easter Rising.

SplendidUtterly · 03/01/2025 13:28

Tallulah Bankhead

wizzler · 03/01/2025 13:30

Bess of Hardwick . A force of nature in a man's world,

cariadlet · 03/01/2025 13:31

Loads of interesting people to learn more about. Thanks everyone.

Please could people post a sentence or 2 about why someone is worth a Google - if the thread gets much longer, it will help us to decide who we want to find out more about (it won't be the same for everyone reading the thread).

Moier · 03/01/2025 13:32

MrsSethGecko · 03/01/2025 11:59

James Barry, surgeon. A woman who disguised herself as a man and was only found out to be female on her death.

Read about her.. fabulous 👌

Jolietta · 03/01/2025 13:47

Juliane Koepcke survived a plane crash in the Amazon rainforest in 1971:

•	The crash: On December 24, 1971, the 17-year-old was on a flight from Lima to Pucallpa in Peru when the plane struck lightning and crashed into the Amazon jungle. She was the sole survivor of the 92 passengers, including her mother. 

•	The fall: Koepcke fell 10,000 ft (3,000 m) while strapped to her seat. 

•	The survival: She survived 11 days alone in the jungle by using skills she learned from helping her parents on their research trips. She crawled and walked through the jungle, fighting hunger and despair, and maggots eating her wounds. 

•	The rescue: She was rescued by local lumberjacks after finding their camp. 

•	The legacy: Koepcke has devoted her life to preserving the rainforest that saved her. She is a German-Peruvian mammalogist who specializes in bats. 


PortiasBiscuit · 03/01/2025 13:48

Sydney Gottlieb… monster!

OlderandwiserMaybe · 03/01/2025 13:50

Sallymaclennane · 03/01/2025 13:21

James Barry is one of my ancestors😃
Francis Sheehy Skeffington and his wife Hanna Sheehy. They were huge proponents of equality for women.
Francis Sheehy Skeffington also played a part in the Easter Rising.

Oooh now I'm fascinated. Just Googled and given Barry hid her real gender her whole adult life and although after death someone discovered some stretch marks there doesn't seem to be an official record of her having a child...... So I'm fascinated how you are related and how you came to know you were? Or are you related via one of her siblings??

OpalMaker · 03/01/2025 13:50

Lady Ottoline Morrell

Joiedepotato · 03/01/2025 13:53

Leonhard Seppala, one of the heroes of the 1925 serum relay from Nenana to Nome, Alaska. The whole thing is an incredible story but Seppala's (and Togo's) contribution is beyond. I also highly recommend watching Togo on Disney+ but be prepared to cry.

Jolietta · 03/01/2025 13:55

Stephanie Slater

Held captive for eight days by one of the UK's most notorious kidnappers, Stephanie Slater faced a new trauma in the aftermath of her release. She would go on to have a huge impact on how victims of crime are treated.
In 1992, the 25-year-old was working at a Birmingham estate agents when she was abducted at knifepoint.
Her kidnapper, Michael Sams, had set a trap, posing as a potential house buyer.
Stephanie endured the horrific ordeal of being kept handcuffed, gagged and blindfolded in a coffin-like box, itself locked inside a wheelie bin in Sams' workshop in Newark-upon-Trent in Nottinghamshire.
Sams, from Sutton-on-Trent, was later found to have murdered 18-year-old Julie Dart from Leeds after using similar means to imprison her.
But remarkably, after eluding a police cordon to pick up a £175,000 ransom from her employers, Sams let Stephanie go.

During his trial, Stephanie described how she had talked to Sams to try to engage with him and increase her chances of survival.
Speaking in a later interview, Stephanie said: "Don't get me wrong, I was terrified every single time I spoke to him. I thought 'I hope I don't say the wrong thing and make him angry'."
Her evidence helped convict him of not only her kidnap, but also the murder of the Leeds teenager.
In 1995, Stephanie published her own account of the kidnapping - Beyond Fear: My Will to Survive.
At the time, she said: "I wrote the book for women who are in danger and I'm trying to speak out for women who are taken by maniacs like Sams.
"I wanted to speak out, a voice in the wilderness, because nothing seems to be done for women these days, nothing has been done since I was kidnapped."

So how did Stephanie end up working on behalf of women who have been through traumatic crimes and the sometimes harrowing police investigations?
Following her release, Sams took Stephanie home, dropping her two streets from her front door.
"He pulled up the car, he said 'I'm sorry about everything; you were the innocent victim'," she recalled, in a later interview.
"Then he said 'Don't look back at the car'. I fell out on to the pavement and the door shut behind me and he drove off at speed. When I opened my eyes, I was partially blind.
"The pressure of the blindfold for eight days and nights had damaged my eyes. All I could see were the swirling orange street lamps. And I could hardly walk."
Somehow, she staggered back to the home she shared with her parents and rang the bell.
"A guy opened the door and I didn't recognise him," she said. "I thought I had come to the wrong house. It turned out he was my mum and dad's family liaison officer.
"He had been there for eight days but had never seen a photograph of me, so he didn't recognise me. Over his shoulder, my dad appeared and screamed 'It's Stephanie. Stephanie's back' and he hauled me into the porch."
Seeing her father's reaction the officer then, shockingly, blocked her from hugging her parents, due to the risk of contaminating forensic evidence.

In a later interview she recalled: "He pushed me to the back of the room, sat me in a chair and said 'You stay there. Don't touch the arms of the chair. You sit there and don't do anything'.
"I was absolutely terrified. I was thinking 'Dear God, what is going on?'
"The reality of it is, you are back from a terrible ordeal and you see your mum or dad and you want to hold them or hug them.
"To a police officer, you are a walking crime scene - I had fibres and things all stuck to me and whatever else.
"But I should never have been denied just a hold of a hand to know that I was home."

Best friend Stacey Kettner said Stephanie confided in her about what happened next.
"The room was cleared and a police surgeon, or whoever they called, made her get undressed in her own living room on this big sheet of brown paper," Stacey said.
"I remember that the door from their living room had frosted glass, so she could see there were people on the other side of that door, so she felt exposed.
"She had long hair and it was matted.
"[The police] had a kind of tick sheet and the doctor was going 'Right, take some blood'.
"There was no empathy, it was kind of 'Right, next thing' - they pulled some hair out without saying that it was what going to happen.
"They took her hand and cut her nails - nothing was explained to her, there was no gentleness."

On top of this, a deal struck between the police and media not to publish details of the kidnap meant Stephanie was put in front of a press conference less than 12 hours after being released and before she had been officially interviewed by officers.
While Stephanie mostly co-operated with police, giving dozens of statements, she refused one suggestion - to re-enact her kidnapping to see if it would jog her memory of events.
Stacey said the psychological strain of Stephanie's ordeal, and a wish to protect her mother, led to her initially not telling police she had been raped by Sams.
Through all of this she did not have any counselling, leaving her and her family to deal with the aftermath alone.
She fled to the Isle of Wight, and for a while a "broken" Stephanie struggled with building a new life.
However, being introduced to a police officer unexpectedly led to a new role.
Stacey recalled: "He was like 'Oh gosh it would have been so interesting during training to talk to someone, or hear about this from someone who has experienced this'.
"He asked if she would be interested in talking to some police trainees and she said 'That's fine'.
"It all started from there."

Within months she had started doing presentations and seminars about the treatment of victims of crime.
"The police loved her," said Stacey. "People who have gone through situations like that, they so rarely come back alive.
"It gave her a sense of purpose, it was a tonic for her."
Stephanie described it as "the counselling I never had".

Snowmanscarf · 03/01/2025 13:59

Sallymaclennane · 03/01/2025 13:21

James Barry is one of my ancestors😃
Francis Sheehy Skeffington and his wife Hanna Sheehy. They were huge proponents of equality for women.
Francis Sheehy Skeffington also played a part in the Easter Rising.

I don’t know the people, but what great names.

BlueFairyBugsBooks · 03/01/2025 13:59

Inspired by the talk on the 50 bookers thread.

Ada Van Dantzig. The only person to have a stolperstein in England. Stolpersteine (Stumbling Stones) are commemorative brass plaques laid in the paving stones outside the last place a Holocaust victim freely chose to live, work or study. There's not masses of information about her. So it's a quick Google.

Also Fauzia Kasindja, whose book "Do They Hear You When You Cry" escaped from Togo to avoid FGM and a forced marriage. She sought asylum in the US, where she was imprisoned, leading to a landmark decision regarding asylum.

GreetingCeridwen · 03/01/2025 14:05

Lizzy Lind af Hageby and Leise Schartau, authors of 'The Shambles of Science' (1903). They enrolled as medical students at a time when the discipline was nearly entirely male-dominated in order to report on the realities of vivisection.

coolkatt · 03/01/2025 14:11

Salamo Arouch.

GreetingCeridwen · 03/01/2025 14:17

GreetingCeridwen · 03/01/2025 14:05

Lizzy Lind af Hageby and Leise Schartau, authors of 'The Shambles of Science' (1903). They enrolled as medical students at a time when the discipline was nearly entirely male-dominated in order to report on the realities of vivisection.

Also Frances Power Cobbe.

cariadlet · 03/01/2025 14:30

Jolietta · 03/01/2025 13:47

Juliane Koepcke survived a plane crash in the Amazon rainforest in 1971:

•	The crash: On December 24, 1971, the 17-year-old was on a flight from Lima to Pucallpa in Peru when the plane struck lightning and crashed into the Amazon jungle. She was the sole survivor of the 92 passengers, including her mother. 

•	The fall: Koepcke fell 10,000 ft (3,000 m) while strapped to her seat. 

•	The survival: She survived 11 days alone in the jungle by using skills she learned from helping her parents on their research trips. She crawled and walked through the jungle, fighting hunger and despair, and maggots eating her wounds. 

•	The rescue: She was rescued by local lumberjacks after finding their camp. 

•	The legacy: Koepcke has devoted her life to preserving the rainforest that saved her. She is a German-Peruvian mammalogist who specializes in bats. 


Thank you for this. I'd heard her amazing survival story but didn't know what happened to her afterwards.
How lovely to hear that she became a mammalogist and devoted herself to caring for rainforests.

AsanteSana · 03/01/2025 15:34

Major Frank Foley - almost the British version of Oscar Schindler - and responsible for saving the lives of thousands of Jews from nazism, but virtually unknown

Maddy70 · 03/01/2025 15:43

A scientist called Fuch. Also s great podcast www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p08llv8n
The story of the atomic bomb. Told through the scientists and spies who changed history. Season 1 follows the scientist who discovers the destructive possibilities of harnessing nuclear power. It leads to the race to beat the Nazis to the first atomic bomb. Season 2 tells of a brilliant scientist who lives a double life, stealing atomic secrets for the Soviet Union. Season 3 is coming soon.

Fgfgfg · 03/01/2025 15:51

Waris Dirie, Somalian model and international anti FGM campaigner.

Bongosbanjo · 03/01/2025 15:56

Mary Barbour, along with other women organised rent strikes in Glasgow during WW1

Spooky2000 · 03/01/2025 16:06

Hypatia of Alexandria. I bet she was really interesting to have a natter with.

IbizaToTheNorfolkBroads · 03/01/2025 16:25

Beryl Burton
Outstanding British cyclist, holder of national and international future in several disciplines for many years - one of which was only taken from her by her daughter.
She used to train with her baby daughter in a sidecar adapted for a pushbike, and she'd ride to races 100s miles away, win, then cycle home, sometimes races abroad. Completely unsponsored. Barely recognised in the uk in her lifetime outside cycling circles.

Jolietta · 03/01/2025 16:41

Frances Power Cobbe.

b. 1822, Dublin; d. 1904, Hengwrt, Wales
Frances Power Cobbe, feminist journalist and pioneer of animal rights activism, founded two major groups: first, in 1875, the Society for the Protection of Animals Liable to Vivisection (SPALV), the first organization to campaign against animal experiments; and second, in 1898, the British Union for the Abolition of Vivisection (BUAV).
Both groups remain active today. She published on animal rights issues in London newspapers along with editorial columns and books on domestic violence, women’s suffrage, and property rights—including An Essay on Intuitive Morals (1855), Darwinism in Morals (1872), and The Duties of Women (1881)—establishing herself as one of the foremost protagonists for the emancipation of women.
Cobbe’s article “Wife Torture in England” (1878) ensured passage of a parliamentary bill that allowed for women’s legal separation from abusive husbands. “The part of my work for women … to which I look back with most satisfaction,” she stated in her autobiography, “was that in which I laboured to obtain protection for unhappy wives, beaten, mangled, mutilated or trampled on by brutal husbands”

X17 · 03/01/2025 16:45

Charles Paget Wade

Plantation owner, mixed-race, owned a manor house which he eventually gave to the nation. He amassed a collection that was so large he had to move out of Snowshill Manor into a cottage in the grounds.

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