LIZ AND EILISH MCCOLGAN
Scottish mother and daughter duo, Liz and Eilish McColgan are well-known in the sporting world for being medal-winning middle-distance and long-distance track and road-running athletes.
Liz McColgan is a decorated former athlete, having competed at World Championships, Olympic Games, and Commonwealth Games, to name a few, all across the world. Eilish followed in her mother’s footsteps and is a middle and long-distance runner. She is the current 2022 Commonwealth Games 10,000 metres champion with the Games’ record, and 5,000 metres silver medallist. Another very well decorated athlete, she is a four-time European Championships medallist, with many more records and achievements in her pocket.
Learn more about Eilish McColgan
Learn more about Liz McColgan
THE EDINBURGH SEVEN (1800s)
The Edinburgh Seven were a group of women in the 1800s, including Sophia Jex-Blake, Isabel Thorne, Edith Pechey, Matilda Chaplin, Helen Evans, Mary Anderson, and Emily Bovell, who studied medicine at Edinburgh University. They became the first women to finish their undergraduate studies at any British university but were prevented from graduating by their male students.
This led the group to kickstart a political campaign to grant women the right to a university education. Their fight and campaigning led to legislation finally being passed in 1877 which ensured a future for women’s education.
MARY SLESSOR (1848 – 1915)
Mary Slessor was born in Aberdeen and was famed for being a Scottish Presbyterian missionary to Nigeria. In Nigeria, Slessor learned Efik, one of the local languages, and once she gained the trust of the locals, she was able to spread Christianity whilst promoting women’s rights and protecting native children.
Slessor also began teaching in Nigeria and because of her understanding of the native language, she is most famous for having stopped the common practice of infanticide of twins in Okoyong, an area of Cross River State, Nigeria.