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Hope Black nee Macpherson, Curator of Molluscs (1919 - )
Image: Portrait ofHope Macpherson, Museum Victoria Curator of Molluscs (1946 - 1965)
Source: Museum Victoria
Jessie Hope Black (nee Macpherson), Curator of Molluscs, achieved many 'firsts' during her long career, and has made a lasting contribution in the fields of Malacology, Marine Biology and their application to environmental management. She has been a mentor for many women following in these fields and an inspiration to both men and women.
In 1946 Jessie Hope Black (nee Macpherson) became the first woman to be appointed a Curator at the National Museum of Victoria in its then almost 90 year history. Hope had begun her scientific career as a museum assistant in 1937. Having applied for a job in Taxidermy the director at the time John Mahoney counselled her on the 'inappropriateness' of a woman in such a role and suggested they would find her something else. She spent her early days at the Museum under the financial support of the Carnegie Corporation developing and preparing new display cases and the ground breaking McCoy Hall dioramas.
Promoted to Curator of Molluscs in 1946 after completing a Science Degree part time at Melbourne University, she continued in this role until 1965, when she was required to resign from the Victorian public service as a result of the prohibition on the employment of married women known as the Marriage bar. After leaving the Museum Hope retrained as a science teacher, spending 13 rewarding years teaching in Victorian country high schools, her career providing an example to girls of the opportunities for them in science.
In 1947 Hope was part of the Museum team which used pack horses to survey the Snowy River Gorge, prior to dam construction and water diversion of the Snowy Mountain Hydroelectric Scheme. Hope also led the Museum's participation in ground-breaking marine biological surveys of Port Phillip Bay from 1957-1963. The baseline data provided by the Port Phillip Bay Survey is still in use today by environmental scientists, managers and planners, providing a benchmark against which to monitor environmental changes.
In conjunction with the Country Roads Board, CSIRO and Australian Paper Manufacturers she investigated the impact of the shipworm Teredo, (a marine bivalve mollusc which bores into wooden structures including bridges), in eastern Victoria and South Australia. She also undertook a survey of the edible molluscs in Victoria to determine the quantities of various species and the feasibility of the establishment of commercial fisheries.
Hope was a member of first group of four women to travel to Antarctica as part of an Australian National Antarctic Research Expedition (ANARE) to Macquarie Island in 1959.
She co-authored, with C. J. Gabriel, Marine Molluscs of Victoria published in 1962, still widely used as the reference work on this topic. She was a consulting malacologist to the National Science Foundation of the Philadelphia Academy of Natural Sciences, USA.
Hope was a pioneer in her desire to involve the broader community in the life of the Museum, both through her education work with the Blind Institute, planning and supervising a biology course for blind children at the Museum, for which she was made a Life Governor of the Royal Victorian Institute for the Blind. She further included the community with the establishment of a volunteer programme utilising groups such as the Marine Study Group of Victoria and the Underwater Explorers and Photographers Club. These programs engaged volunteers to assist in the labour-intensive activities of sorting, documenting and analysing specimens and data from the museum research collections. To this day volunteers continue to be extensively involved in museum activities.
Unrelated to her work in science Hope has been an active advocate for services for the disabled. Over many years she supported groups with her considerable administrative ability to lobby for suitable independent housing for the disabled.
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Letter - From Samuel Fitzpatrick, Victoria, 23 Dec 1936
Letter from Samuel Fitzpatrick while at "Airdrie" in Hamilton, dated 23 December 1936. It is uncertain who Fitzpatrick was writing to and what his association was with Hope Macpherson. ...
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Photograph - Hope Macpherson at Time of Receiving Degree, Melbourne University, Victoria, ...
Sepia image of Hope Black nee Macpherson holding her degree, taken at the conferring of her degree at Melbourne University in April 1946. Hope Macpherson was the first female Curator ...
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Photograph - Hope Macpherson After Receiving Degree Standing with Six Others, Melbourne Un ...
Sepia image of Hope Black nee Macpherson taken at the conferring of her degree at Melbourne University in April 1946, showing her with fellow student George Gordon and five other family ...
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Photograph - Shirley McColl & Hope Macpherson in Mollusca Collection, National Museum of V ...
Black and white image of Shirley McColl on the left and Hope Macpherson on the right in front of a series of drawers and cabinets providing storage for the Mollusca Collection. When thi ...
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Photograph - Hope Macpherson Working in Shell Bay, National Museum of Victoria, Melbourne, ...
Black and white image of Hope Macpherson in the shells collection store using a cloth to clean a large shell sitting on a work table. Hope Macpherson was the first female curator at Nat ...
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Photograph - Hope Macpherson Identifying Shells, National Museum of Victoria, Melbourne, 1 ...
Black and white image of Hope Macpherson sitting at a work bench looking at a slide through a microscope. Hope Macpherson was the first female curator at National Museum of Victoria (no ...
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Photograph - Portrait of Jessie Macpherson, circa 1940
Black and white portrait of Jessie Macpherson, mother of Hope Macpherson, first female curator at the National Museum of Victoria (now Museum Victoria). Hope Macpherson along with Isobe ...
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Photograph - Hope Macpherson Working on Shell Collection, National Museum of Victoria, Mel ...
Black and white image of Hope Macpherson arranging specimen boxes on a storage shelf. Hope Macpherson was the first female curator at National Museum of Victoria (now Museum Victoria). ...
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Digital Image - Hope Macpherson & Dan Lynch Sorting Material, Port Phillip Survey, Victori ...
Digital image depicting Hope Macpherson, Curator of Molluscs at National Museum of Victoria, and Dan Lynch, Fisheries and Wildlife Department, sorting specimens on the quarantine jetty ...
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Photograph - Hope Macpherson Sitting on her Father's Lap, Mount Napier Station, Victoria, ...
Hope Macpherson sitting in her father's lap (Cluny Macpherson). Hope was the first female curator at National Museum of Victoria (now Museum Victoria). Hope along with Isobel Bennett, S ...
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