Biography
Biography of Margaret Smith
The following biography of Margaret M Smith is an excerpt from the booklet “The life and work of Margaret M Smith (Anonymous 1982) and is identical to the information that was provided on the residence notice board during the selection process. Biographies of the other proposed persons are not included in this report for the sake of conciseness, but are kept on record in the residence.
Margaret Mary Macdonald was born on the 26th September 1916 in Indwe, Cape Province, a small village on the border of Transkei. She was Head Girl and Head Scholar at Indwe High School as well as chairperson of the debating society, captain of netball and tennis and holder of the tennis shield for girls from1929 to 1932. She was an accomplished singer and musician and at the Wodehouse Eisteddfod in 1933 she won eight medals for singing (soprano and mezzo soprano), for violin in trio, for recitation, and for composing a sonnet, and English essay and poem. At the East London Eisteddfod the same year she was awarded the gold medal for singing (girls under 17). During these years she was also awarded music certificates for piano and harmony by the University of South Africa.
Mary Macdonald attended Rhodes University College in Grahamstown from 1934 to 1937, and was an active member of numerous committees. She was awarded her B.Sc. degree in 1936, majoring in physics and chemistry (with distinction), and became a senior demonstrator in chemistry in 1937. She also attended the Grahamstown Training College School of Music and obtained her U.T.L.M. for singing in 1936.
For many years she tutored students in physics and chemistry and in 1945 she taught physics at St. Andrew’s College and chemistry at Rhodes University College.
Mary Macdonald and J.L.B. Smith were married on the 14th April 1938 in Florida, Transvaal. She explained that Mary Macdonald sounded good, but that Mary Smith was grim! Hence, from her marriage on she was known as Margaret.
Besides his professional interests in chemistry, J.L.B. Smith had since 1930 developed a keen interest in ichthyology, the study of fishes. His young wife soon became involved in his hobby and accompanied him on fishing trips and collecting expeditions. Eight months after their wedding they were presented with one of the outstanding scientific finds of the century – the living coelacanth, later named Latimeria chalumnae by J.L.B. Smith. From January to June 1939 the Smiths worked furiously on the description of this remarkable fish, and the manuscript was finally submitted to a scientific journal four days before their son William was born.
In 1946 the Department of Ichthyology was established at Rhodes University and J.L.B and Margaret Smith were able to devote all their energies to the production of an authoritative book on the sea fishes of southern Africa. One of their greatest problems was a lack of suitable illustrations. Margaret Smith, in typical pioneering style, took on the task. By sheer hard work, and without prior artistic training, she produced a fine series of colour paintings of our marine fishes. She later was recognised as one of the most accomplished fish illustrators in the world and she trained a host of new artists.
The Smiths mounted numerous fish collection expeditions to the coasts of South Africa and southern Mozambique from 1938 to 1949. The first edition of ‘The Sea Fishes of Southern Africa’ published in 1949, contained 685 illustrations (from a total of about 1320) by Margaret Smith, and was acclaimed worldwide.
A series of major expeditions was organised between 1951 and 1956. In addition to being a co-author, she produced a large number of figures, many of them in colour. One of her first major solo works was the description and illustration of the common marine fishes of South Africa in the “Ensiklopedie van die Wêreld”.
J.L.B. Smith often paid tribute to his wife’s work. In the acknowledgements to the “Sea Fishes” book he states “My wife has been my full-time partner from the beginning and has been artist, adviser, buffer, critic and secretary, and is one of the most skilful collectors of fish with many devices of her own. She has shared with me many hardships and sustained me when my courage has failed. But for her sprit, energy and unflagging enthusiasm this work could hardly have reached completion in any reasonable time.”
After the death of J.L.B. Smith in January 1968, Margaret Smith continued her ichthyological research in Grahamstown. At the end of 1968 the South African Council for Scientific and Industrial Research and Rhodes University decided to establish the J.L.B Smith Institute of Ichthyology. The task of supervising the transition from the old Department to the new Institute fell on Margaret and she was appointed the first director of the new Institute.
Margaret Smith served on the Senate and Faculty of Science of the University from 1968 to 1982 and was appointed an associate professor in 1980 and a full professor in 1981. On 30th April 1982 Margaret Smith retired as director, leaving behind her a vigorous and growing Institute, containing the largest collection of southern African marine fishes in the world, and a thriving new Department of Ichthyology and Fisheries Science.
During her remarkable scientific career, Margaret Smith had progressed from lecturer to technician, artist and taxonomist.
Last Modified: Tue, 16 May 2017 15:03:39 SAST