Professor Dame Ida Caroline Mann, Mrs Gye, DBE, FRCS (6 February 1893, West Hampstead, London – 18 November 1983, Perth, Western Australia)[1] was "a distinguished ophthalmologist ... equally well known for her pioneering research work on embryology and development of the eye, and on the influences of genetic and social factors on the incidence and severity of eye disease throughout the world".[2] Only six other women were Fellows at this time.[3]

Professor Dame

Ida Mann
DBE, FRCS
Born
Ida Caroline Mann

6 February 1893
West Hampstead, London, England, UK
Died18 November 1983 (aged 90)
Alma materLondon School of Medicine for Women
Scientific career
FieldsOphthalmology
InstitutionsUniversity of Oxford

Education edit

Ida Caroline Mann was educated at Wycombe House School, Hampstead, London.[4] She passed the Civil Service Girl Clerk's examination and took a job at the Post Office Savings Bank.[5]

Despite opposition from her father, she applied to study medicine at the London School of Medicine for Women, the only medical school which was open to women at that time. She passed the matriculation examination in 1914, one of only eight women out of hundreds of passes.[6] She completed her studies, 'with no trouble and intense delight', and qualified Bachelor of Medicine and Bachelor of Surgery (MB, BS) in 1920.[7]

Early career edit

After qualification she had no clear idea about specialising and applied for all available positions as a houseman (a junior role for newly qualified doctors). She was appointed as the Ophthalmic House Surgeon at St Mary's Hospital, London, under Leslie Paton and Frank Juler.[8] Thus began a lifelong passion for ophthalmic research and practice. During her medical studies she had developed an interest in embryology, working alongside Professor J. E. S. Frazer.

Now she combined this interest with ophthalmology and wrote her thesis on the embryology of the human eye, for which she was awarded her D.Sc. in 1924.[9] To further her career she qualified in general surgery, becoming a Fellow of the Royal College of Surgeons in 1924.[2]

Mann was ambitious and determined to reach the top in her chosen field. To her this meant securing an honorary staff post at Moorfields Eye Hospital, London, and running her own private practice at Harley Street, London.[9] She had achieved both by 1927.[2]

Her stepping stones had been the following posts: Junior Clinical Assistant at Moorfields (1921); staff appointment at the Elizabeth Garrett Anderson Hospital for Women (1922);[1] Senior Clinical Assistant to Mr A. C. Hudson at Moorfields (1922); Pathologist and Assistant Surgeon to Mr Ernest Lane at the Central London Ophthalmic Hospital (1925); staff appointment at the Central London Eye Hospital (1925).[citation needed]

Second World War edit

At the outbreak of war, Moorfields Eye Hospital was commandeered as a first aid post and the staff were dispersed. The premises in which Mann conducted her private practice were also closed down by the landlord. She found new premises for her own practice and then set about re-siting Moorfields. She found hospital premises in Edgware (10 miles from central London), belonging to the Priory of the Holy Sepulchre, secured the lease, moved the nursing staff there and saw the gradual return of the surgical staff.[10]

There was still a need for a central London site to treat ophthalmic emergencies, and by a mixture of bravado and sheer energy, she managed to re-occupy part of the old Moorfields Hospital on City Road, which remained operational throughout the war despite being bombed. In 1940 she undertook some personal research on the treatment of mustard gas burns of the eye, using laboratories belonging to the Imperial Cancer Research Fund at Mill Hill. It was here she met her future husband, Professor William Gye, the fund's director.[citation needed]

When the results of her private research became known, she was put in charge of one of the research teams of the Chemical Defence Research Department under the Ministry of Supply. Working with her friend, Davidine Pullinger, and the biochemist, Antoinette Pirie, she worked out the entire pathology of mustard gas keratitis, which afflicted soldiers from the First World War some ten to fifteen years after they had survived a mustard gas attack. Although the team did not find a cure, they were able to alleviate symptoms through the use of contact lenses.[11]

Oxford edit

During the war, honorary staff were not allowed to resign from their posts at civilian hospitals. Therefore, when Mann applied for, and was appointed to, the post of Margaret Ogilvy Reader in Ophthalmology at the University of Oxford in 1941, she was obliged to combine this research and teaching post with her work at Moorfields in London, her work on the Chemical Defence Research team and her work as a private consultant in London and Oxford.

During her tenure at Oxford, among other achievements, she oversaw the building of the Nuffield Laboratory of Ophthalmology, restarted the diploma courses for post-graduates, inaugurated the Orthoptic School and re-instituted the Oxford Ophthalmological Congress. In her own words, she had 'cleared the Augean stable' in nine months.[12]

Her efforts were recognised by the university in 1945 when she was given a personal professorship: the first woman to receive one at Oxford. She was Titular Professor there from January 1945 until 30 September 1947. Mann was also a Fellow of St Hugh's College, Oxford.[13]

Marriage edit

Mann became acquainted with William Ewart Gye, known as Bill Gye, who was Director of the Imperial Cancer Research Fund at Mill Hill, and his wife, Elsa, during the war. After Elsa’s death from cancer, Mann and Gye married in December 1944.[14] Mann became stepmother to her husband's three sons from his first marriage. She did not change her name on marriage, as the complications arising from having two Professor Gyes in the same household were easily foreseen.

Australia edit

Mann had first visited Australia in 1939 as the British Medical Association's representative at the 1st Annual General Meeting of the Ophthalmological Society of Australia (B.M.A.). She flew there in an Imperial Airways Flying Boat, which took a week to fly at low altitude from Southampton to Melbourne. She gave a number of papers and made the return journey "with the feeling that the gloom of Europe would soon descend, and that this brilliant, sunny and friendly land would be blotted from my memory".[15] In 1949 she and her husband set off for Perth and Melbourne on an autumn cruise.[16]

The introduction of the National Health Service in Britain had drastically changed Mann's work and she was dissatisfied with the impact on ophthalmology. Perhaps more pressingly her husband had retired from Mill Hill and was suffering from ill-health which was exacerbated by the English winters. They were immediately smitten with Perth. Mann purchased a bungalow in Dalkeith, resigned from Moorfields, and arranged for all their belongings to be shipped to Australia.[17] Here they conducted experiments on cancer viruses using in-bred strains of mice to ensure consistency.[18] She started a private practice as an ophthalmologist, which was always her insurance against economic uncertainty.[19]

Trachoma research edit

Bill died in 1952, leaving her bereft, 'I was unhinged; so tired that I was almost insane'.[19] She regained her balance by working and traveling. Shortly after his death she took an assignment reporting on the incidence of eye disease for the Western Australia Public Health Department. This assignment extended to four years and provided incontrovertible proof of endemic trachoma among the indigenous population.[20]

She traveled extensively throughout Australia and Oceania studying the incidence of eye disease in different races and cultures, with particular reference to the Aboriginal people. This research produced the classic work, Culture, Race, Climate and Eye Disease (1966).[21]

Mann published extensively in the area of eye anatomy and eye disease, publishing many scientific articles and several books. She also wrote on her travels and findings relating to trachoma, published under her married name Ida Gye or a pseudonym, Caroline Gye. These were China 13 and The Cockney and the Crocodile.[citation needed]

Honors edit

  • She was appointed CBE in 1950 and DBE in 1980 for services to the welfare of Aboriginal people.[1]
  • She was inducted into the Ophthalmology Hall of Fame in 2007.
  • She received an honorary Doctor of Science from Murdoch University (Perth, Western Australia) in 1983.

Death edit

Dame Ida Mann died at her home in Perth in 1983, aged 90.[1]

Publications edit

  • Ida Mann, The Development of the Human Eye (Cambridge, 1928)[1]
  • Ida Mann, Developmental Abnormalities of the Eye (Cambridge, 1937); (2nd edition, 1957)[22]
  • Ida Mann and Antoinette Pirie, The Science of Seeing (Harmondsworth, 1946)[1][23]
  • Ida Mann, Culture, Race, Climate and Eye Disease (Illinois, 1966)
  • Caroline Gye, The Cockney and the Crocodile (London, 1962)[1]
  • Caroline Gye, China 13 (London, 1964)

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g "Mann, Ida (1893–1983)." Dictionary of Women Worldwide: 25,000 Women Through the Ages, edited by Anne Commire and Deborah Klezmer, vol. 2, Yorkin Publications, 2007, p. 1204. Gale eBooks. Accessed 22 August 2021.
  2. ^ a b c J. M. Tiffany, 'Mann, Dame Ida Caroline (1893–1983)', Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (OUP, 2004)
  3. ^ Ida Mann, The Chase (Fremantle, 1986), p. 68
  4. ^ Ida Mann, The Chase (Fremantle, 1986), p. 27
  5. ^ Ida Mann, The Chase (Fremantle, 1986), p. 46
  6. ^ Ida Mann, The Chase (Fremantle, 1986), pp. 48–49
  7. ^ Ida Mann, The Chase (Fremantle, 1986), p. 64
  8. ^ Ida Mann, The Chase (Fremantle, 1986), p. 66
  9. ^ a b Ida Mann, The Chase (Fremantle, 1986), p. 67
  10. ^ Ida Mann, The Chase (Fremantle, 1986), pp. 114–15
  11. ^ Ida Mann, The Chase (Fremantle, 1986), pp. 117–18.
  12. ^ Ida Mann, The Chase (Fremantle, 1986), pp. 127–28
  13. ^ "Women at Oxford". University of Oxford. Retrieved 1 February 2019.
  14. ^ "W. E. Gye. M.D., F.R.C.P., F.R.S". British Medical Journal. 2 (4790): 945–946. 25 October 1952. PMC 2021835. PMID 12978397.
  15. ^ Ida Mann, The Chase (Fremantle, 1986), pp. 108–11
  16. ^ Ida Mann, The Chase (Fremantle, 1986), p. 138
  17. ^ Ida Mann, The Chase (Fremantle, 1986), pp. 140–41
  18. ^ Ida Mann, The Chase (Fremantle, 1986), pp. 141–42
  19. ^ a b Ida Mann, The Chase (Fremantle, 1986), p. 143
  20. ^ Ida Mann, The Chase (Fremantle, 1986)
  21. ^ "Mann, Dame Ida (1893-1983)". english-heritage.org.uk. Retrieved 1 February 2019.
  22. ^ Wagner, Henry G. (1960). "Review of Developmental Abnormalities of the Eye by Ida Mann". The Quarterly Review of Biology. 35 (3). University of Chicago Press: 240. doi:10.1086/403139. ISSN 0033-5770.
  23. ^ Chapanis, A. (1947). "Review of The Science of Seeing by Ida Mann and A. Pirie". The Quarterly Review of Biology. 22 (4). University of Chicago Press: 355. doi:10.1086/395987. ISSN 0033-5770.

Further reading edit

  • Mann, Ida, The Chase: an autobiography, edited by Ros Golding (Fremantle Arts Centre Press, 1986)
  • Radi, Heather (editor), 200 Australian Women, Women's Press: Sydney, 1988.

External links edit