Margaret Hanington Teed: Difference between revisions

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In 1923, UNB formally affiliated itself with the Saint John Law School. Margaret Hanington Teed, the daughter of Mariner G. Teed, a lecturer at the Law School and Chancellor of the Anglican Diocese of Fredericton, was the first woman to enroll and graduate from the new school. Margaret's graduation notice in ''The Brunswickan'' reads:
In 1923, UNB formally affiliated itself with the Saint John Law School. Margaret Hanington Teed, the daughter of Mariner G. Teed, a lecturer at the Law School and Chancellor of the Anglican Diocese of Fredericton, was the first woman to enroll and graduate from the new school. Margaret's graduation notice in ''The Brunswickan'' reads:


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'''Source(s):'''
'''Source(s):'''
* ''The Brunswickan'', vol. 43, no. 7, May 1924.
* Townsend, David A. ''Manners, morals and mayhem: a look at the first 200 years of law and society in New Brunswick''. Fredericton: Public Legal Information Services, 1985. p. 97-98.


© UNB Archives & Special Collections, 2013
*''The Brunswickan'', vol. 43, no. 7, May 1924.
*Townsend, David A. ''Manners, morals and mayhem: a look at the first 200 years of law and society in New Brunswick''. Fredericton: Public Legal Information Services, 1985. p. 97-98.
[[Category:Notable Women at UNB]]
<br/>© UNB Archives & Special Collections, 2013

Revision as of 10:49, 27 May 2014

In 1923, UNB formally affiliated itself with the Saint John Law School. Margaret Hanington Teed, the daughter of Mariner G. Teed, a lecturer at the Law School and Chancellor of the Anglican Diocese of Fredericton, was the first woman to enroll and graduate from the new school. Margaret's graduation notice in The Brunswickan reads:

"Margaret was stately. Tall and fair and with queenly bearing she well typified womanhood in the midst of manhood, herself the only representative in the class... She took a business course at Miss Johnson's Business College, at St. John (sic), and then entered the Law School. She expects to practise her profession in St. John (sic)."

Source(s):

  • The Brunswickan, vol. 43, no. 7, May 1924.
  • Townsend, David A. Manners, morals and mayhem: a look at the first 200 years of law and society in New Brunswick. Fredericton: Public Legal Information Services, 1985. p. 97-98.


© UNB Archives & Special Collections, 2013