Frances Farrer

The Hon. Dame Frances Margaret Farrer DBE (17 March 1895 – 27 January 1977)[1] was Secretary of the NUSEC and later was named as General Secretary of the Women's Institute (NFWI) in 1929.

Life and career

The daughter of Thomas Farrer, 2nd Baron Farrer (a senior civil servant) and his first wife, Evelyn Spring Rice, Frances ran the office on civil service lines. Meriel Withall, one of her successors said "it was a model of [good] government".

Partly through her family connections she had a network of contacts which were very useful to NFWI as the organisation became increasingly active in lobbying government. A founder member, in 1920, and first secretary of Abinger Women's Institute, she later became Director of the Abinger Hall Estate Co. Later she worked as a VCO in Surrey and was a member of the County Executive Committee. In 1926 she was appointed as one of the Regular Organisers of the NFWI. In 1929 she was promoted to Assistant Secretary of the NFWI, and later General Secretary, a post she held until her retirement in 1959.

Damehood

She was created a Dame Commander of the Order of the British Empire in 1950.

gollark: Wow, these eggs look *really cool*.
gollark: I got a `doit` code too!
gollark: Wait, what's *that* breed?
gollark: You people have more codes than I have dragons.
gollark: It should probably just not get sick.

References

  • Profile, nfwi.org.uk; accessed 14 April 2016.

Sources

  • "FARRER, Hon. Dame Frances (Margaret)", Who Was Who, A & C Black, 1920–2008; online edn, Oxford University Press, December 2007 accessed 20 May 2011


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