Máirin de Valéra facts for kids
Quick facts for kids
Máirin de Valéra
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Born | Dublin, Ireland
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12 April 1912
Died | 8 August 1984 Galway, Ireland
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(aged 72)
Resting place | Glasnevin Cemetery, Dublin, Ireland |
Alma mater | University College Dublin |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Phycology |
Institutions | NUI Galway |
Author abbrev. (botany) | de Valera |
Máirin de Valéra (born April 12, 1912 – died August 8, 1984) was an important Irish scientist. She was a phycologist, which means she studied algae (seaweeds and other simple plant-like organisms). She made history by becoming the first professor of Botany (the study of plants) at NUI Galway, a university in Ireland.
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Early Life and Education
Máirin de Valéra was born in Dublin, Ireland, on April 12, 1912. She was the oldest of seven children. Her father, Éamon de Valera, was a well-known Irish politician. Her mother, Sinéad, was a primary school teacher.
Máirin went to school at Holy Faith Convent in Greystones and Loreto College in Dublin. She then went to University College Dublin to study science. In 1935, she earned a top degree in botany. She continued her studies, getting her Master's degree in 1936. For her Master's, she looked at two types of conifer trees: Athrotaxis and Sequoia.
Studying Seaweed Abroad
Máirin received a scholarship and traveled to England to study at the University of Leeds from 1936 to 1937. Here, she became very interested in marine algae, which are plants that live in the sea. She continued this research at Aberystwyth University in Wales.
Later, she moved to Sweden to work at the Marine Biological Laboratory in Kristineberg. In 1937, she joined the University of Lund and worked with Harald Kylin, a very famous phycologist. During this time, Máirin wrote several scientific papers about how algae are built and how they work. In 1938, she briefly returned to Ireland to collect algae in Galway Bay. She later wrote about what she found there.
A Career in Botany
In 1939, Máirin de Valéra returned to Ireland from Sweden. She started working as an assistant in the natural history department at University College Galway (UCG). She was the only botanist on staff, so she taught all the botany classes. Her workload doubled when the university started offering lectures in the Irish language as well.
Because she was so busy and far from other phycologists, she didn't publish much during this time. However, she kept doing fieldwork, which means going out to study plants in their natural homes. In 1942, she found Asparagopsis armata, a type of red seaweed, in the UK or Ireland for the very first time.
Helping During World War II
During World War II, Máirin helped with an important project. From 1943 to 1946, she surveyed marine algae to see if they could be used as a source of agar. Agar is a jelly-like substance used in food and science. Much of this work happened along the west coast of Ireland. Her research led her to write the introduction for a book called Notes on some common Irish seaweeds in 1950. The work she did on Pterocladia and Gelidium (two types of red algae) during this time became the basis for her PhD thesis. She earned her PhD from NUI in 1945.
Becoming a Professor
In 1947, Máirin de Valéra became a lecturer in botany at UCG. She taught almost the entire Bachelor of Science degree in botany in both Irish and English. She also helped start the British Phycological Society and attended its first meeting in Bangor, Wales, in 1951. She later became the society's vice-president in 1969 and was given a lifetime membership in 1977. Being part of this society encouraged her to do more field studies of algae and publish more papers until she retired.
Máirin also helped organize the first international plant geography conference in Ireland after the war in 1949. In 1950, she helped organize the first Seaweed Conference at UCG. In 1956, she was elected to the Royal Irish Academy, becoming one of the first women members. She served on many committees there. In the 1960s, a new position was created at UCG: the chair of botany. Máirin de Valéra was the first person to hold this important role. She was the professor of botany from 1962 until she retired in 1977. After retiring, she was named professor emeritus at National University of Ireland.
Later Life and Legacy
After her mother passed away, Máirin often went with her father to official state events. Even after retiring, she continued to take part in field studies. Her last study was for a marine field station at Finavarra, County Clare. She died suddenly at her home in Galway on August 8, 1984.
How She Is Remembered
Máirin de Valéra left her collection of dried plants (herbarium), books, and scientific papers to the botany department at UCG. In 1982, a scientist named Michael D. Guiry named a type of red algae Devaleraea in her honor. This shows how important her work was. A list of her 21 scientific papers was put together by Guiry and Dixon. The Máirín de Valéra Carron Field Research Facility, which started in 1975, is also named in her memory.
Some Published Work
- De Valéra, M. 1958. A topographical guide to the seaweed of Co. Galway Bay with some brief notes on other districts on the west coast of Ireland. Institute for Industrial Standards and Research Dublin, Dublin.