Mary Herring

Dame Mary Ranken Lyle Herring, DBE, CStJ (31 March 1895 - 26 October 1981) was an Australian physician and community worker.

Lady Herring (with hat) looks on as Sir Edmund Herring, the new Chief Justice of Victoria, greets guests at an informal reception in his rooms. Major General C.E.M. Lloyd, Adjutant General, congratulates Sir Edmund on his appointment.

Early life

Born the eldest of four children of Sir Thomas Ranken Lyle, a mathematical physicist, and his wife, Frances Isobel Clare Millear, she attended Toorak College between 1906 and 1912, and she excelled both academically and at sport. In 1913 she entered the University of Melbourne as a medical student. She was captain of the women's tennis and hockey teams, obtaining University Sporting Blue in both sports.

Mary graduated with her Bachelor of Medicine and Surgery (MB, BS) in 1921, achieving first-class honours in all subjects, with a first in medicine and fourth in surgery. She won the Keith Levi Memorial Scholarship in medicine and the Sameson prize in clinical medicine (Hilton). She became a resident surgeon at Royal Melbourne Hospital under Sir Alan Newton.

In 1918 she had met Edmund Herring, then a young Australian captain in the British Army on leave from the Macedonian front of the Great War, and they were married on 6 April 1922 at Toorak Presbyterian Church. They had three daughters, Mary Cecile ("Molly"; b. 1924), Judith Ann ("Judy"; b. 1926), and Margaret Lyle (b. 1933).

Career

Mary Herring became a medical officer for the Pre-Natal Clinic at the Prahran Health Centre In 1926. This clinic was the first of its kind in Melbourne, and became a model for similar clinic established by Mary in South Melbourne in 1940. At the time she started work at the Prahran clinic, she was a mother herself and pregnant with Judy, a circumstance of great interest to the women who sought advice or treatment at the clinic. She continued working at the Prahran Health Centre until 1945.

Herring joined the Melbourne District Nursing Society in 1931, and was its vice president from 1943 to 1953. Mary was one of three doctors who banded together to establish Women's Welfare Clinic to offer advice on birth control, at a time when many doctors and a large segment of the community were opposed to it. This clinic functioned for one day a week until 1940 when it was discontinued, as the advice it offered could by then be obtained elsewhere.

Affiliations

Damehood

Mary Herring was created a Dame Commander of the Order of the British Empire on 11 June 1960 "for services to nursing in Victoria".

Motorcar

Lady Herring's Rover P4 110

Lady Mary Herring was well known for her fine taste in Motor Cars. For many years she owned a Rover P4 110, she tastefully selected this vehicle model which had a fine reputation for quality. The vehicle in now proudly owned by a member of the Rover P4 Guild of Australia and has recently undergone a restoration process to bring the vehicle back to her former glory.





Death

Before her death on 26 October 1981, aged 86, following a long illness, Dame Mary Herring planned her funeral service, requesting that no announcements be made until after she was buried. A small private service was held on 28 October 1981.

Legacy

The Mary Herring Hall at Toorak College is named in her honour.

Sources

References