Dorothy Ellicott

Dorothy May Ellicott
OBE GMH JP

Photo of Dorothy Ellicott from Our Gibraltar: A Short History of The Rock
Born Dorothy May Bridger
1901
Havant, United Kingdom
Died 1990 (aged 8889)
Gibraltar
Residence Gibraltar
Nationality British (Gibraltarian)
Ethnicity English
Citizenship British
Education Loreto Convent
Occupation Nurse, Politician, Historian, Chair of the Gibraltar Museum
Known for Public service and service to Gibraltar's heritage
Notable work Our Gibraltar: A Short History of The Rock
Home town Gibraltar
Term December 1947 – December 1956 (Gibraltar City Council)
September 1959 – September 1964 (Gibraltar Legislative Council)
Political party Association for the Advancement of Civil Rights (AACR), independent
Board member of Gibraltar Museum
Gibraltar Society for the Prevention of Blindness
Gibraltar Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals
Religion Protestant
Spouse(s) John (Jack) Teague Ellicott
Children None
Awards Member of the British Empire (1947)
Officer of the British Empire (1972)

Dorothy May Ellicott, OBE, GMH, JP (1901–1990), was a Gibraltarian historian and politician.[1]

Early life

Dorothy Ellicott was born in Havant, Hampshire, England in the last quarter of 1901. She was raised in Gibraltar[2] having relocated there with her parents at the age of 5 when her father was transferred to work at the Gibraltar Dockyard.[1][3] There, she received her education from the Sisters of Loreto,[2] either at the day school at Gavino's Passage or at the Loreto Convent on Europa Road, even though Ellicott's family were Anglicans at a time when there was a "fashionable Protestnt school, Miss Hepper's".[1][4]

As a young woman she worked as Secretary to the Editor of the Gibraltar Chronicle, a connection she maintained over the years contributing numerous articles. She was also a Reuters correspondent.[1] In 1926 she married John (Jack) Teague Ellicott. At the start of World War II, she was a member of the St. John Ambulance Nurses and took part in some of the first journeys to French Morocco, in the initial stages of the evacuation of the Gibraltar civilian population (May/June 1940), later returning to "the Rock".[5] When the Gibraltarian evacuees were later expelled from the French Morocco and a wider scale evacuation schema was being implemented, Ellicott had to leave Gibraltar by September 1940[6] and relocated to the United Kingdom, where she remained for four years. She did not return to Gibraltar until August 1944.[7]

Political career

After the war she became involved in politics, initially as a member of the Association for the Advancement of Civil Rights (AACR) (Joshua Hassan's party, of which her husband was also a member; he was elected to the City Council in the first elections after the war, in 1945).[8] In 1947 she was awarded the MBE.[2] She was the first woman to become a member of the City Council, in December 1947, within the candidature of the AACR (this being the first election in which women were allowed to stand and vote), and remained so as an elected member for nine years.[2] In the early 1950s, Ellicott left the AACR.[9] In 1959, she also become the first woman to be elected to the Legislative Council, this time as an independent, remaining there for five years. She was also Chair of the Gibraltar Museum Committee.[2]

After giving up her political roles, she became increasingly active in charitable and cultural activities. She was the Honorary Secretary of the Gibraltar Society for the Prevention of Blindness for twenty years and Chair of the Gibraltar branch of the Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals for fifteen.[2]

In 1970, Dorothy Ellicott was appointed first female Justice of Peace of Gibraltar.[2] In 1972, she was awarded the OBE.[2] In 2008, the recently created Gibraltar Medallion of Honour was bestowed, posthumously, upon Dorothy Ellicott for public service and service to heritage.[10]

As a historian, she wrote several articles, booklets and books. Her most renowned work was Our Gibraltar, published in 1974 by the Gibraltar Museum. It was described by Sir Varyl Begg (Governor of Gibraltar from 1969 to 1973), as a work that told "the story of The Rock in a manner suitable for the visitor seeking a brief outline of historical events in easily digestible form".[11] It is also mentioned by Sir William Jackson (historian and Governor of Gibraltar from 1978 to 1982), in the preface of his work The Rock of the Gibraltarians (1990).[12]

Works

Bibliography

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 Smith, Delilah (31 August 2010). "Dorothy May Bridger Ellicott". Gibraltar Chronicle - Heritage Feature. p. 6.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Ellicott, 133
  3. "Obituary, Dorothy Ellicott; OBE, JP". Gibraltar Chronicle. 12 June 1990. p. 13.
  4. Prior, D (2006). A Short History of Loreto in Gibraltar. Gibraltar: Doma.
  5. Ellicott, 117
  6. Ellicott, 119
  7. Ellicott, 121
  8. Finlayson, T.J. (1990). The Fortress Came First - The story of the civilian population of Gibraltar during the Second World War. United Kingdom: Gibraltar Books Ltd. p. 173. ISBN 0-948466-12-X.
  9. Garcia, Joseph J. (2002). Gibraltar. The Making of a People (2nd ed.). Gibraltar: Panorama Publishing. p. 118.
  10. "Gibraltar Medallion" (PDF). Government of Gibraltar. July 2008. Retrieved 2010-01-02.
  11. Ellicott, Foreword
  12. Jackson, William (1990). The Rock of the Gibraltarians. A History of Gibraltar (Second ed.). Grendon, Northamptonshire, United Kingdom: Gibraltar Books. p. 13. ISBN 0-948466-14-6.
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