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  1. In May 1876, Alfred Marshall and Mary Paley became offi. cially engaged, a matter Jane Harrison, another early Newnham student, attributed to the fact that she had stitched "clean, white ruffles into [Mary's] dress that day". The month of engagement may be wrong since John Neville Keynes's diaries did not record.

  2. Mary Paley Marshall (1850-1944) Mary Paley was the daughter of a clergyman and the great-granddaughter of the philosopher William Paley. In an unusual decision for a Victorian family in Britain, her father continued her education into her adolescence without limiting her to “ladylike subjects,” teaching her divinity and mathematics while ...

  3. 6 de feb. de 2019 · Mary Paley Marshall, the first woman lecturer at University College Bristol, with Professor Sarah Smith, Head of the Department of Economics. “Mary Paley was a pioneer in the field of economics. She was the first woman to pass finals in political economy at Cambridge. (although barred from graduating due to her gender) and in 1875 she was ...

  4. Book Description. Mary Paley Marshall was an economist and one of the first women to take the Tripos examination in 1874, achieving top marks, but could not receive a degree on account of her gender. She also was one of the first five women to be admitted and study at Newnham College as part of Cambridge University.

  5. Mary Paley married her former economics teacher, Alfred Marshall, in 1876. In 1885, the couple returned to Cambridge, and Paley resumed her lectureship at Newnham College. Her lectures were compiled and published as Economics of Industry , with her husband as co-author (although the extent of his participation remains ambiguous).

  6. 1 de ene. de 2017 · B31. British economist, born in Ufford (Nottinghamshire) on 24 October 1850; died in Cambridge 7 March 1944. Great-granddaughter of the great theologian William Paley, she was brought up in a strictly evangelical faith in Ufford, her father’s vicarage. Thomas Paley, had taken a good degree in mathematics (33rd wrangler) in 1833 at Cambridge ...

  7. His "Principles of Economics," the first of a planned two-volume work, appeared in 1890. An instant success, it established Marshall as one of the world's leading economists. Its strength lay in its comprehensiveness and the degree to which it incorporated previous developments, along with Marshall's own observations, in a seamless fashion.