THE LATE MISS G. C. M. CAMERON
AN APPRECIATION
(Contributed.)
They shall not grow old as we that are left grow old;
Age shall not wither them, nor the years condemn.
At the going down of the sun and in the morning
We will remember them.
Yesterday afternoon Gladys Christian Mary Cameron was quietly laid to rest by her family and a small group of intimate friends. Rarely is the passing of a young woman mourned by so wide a circle. Hers was a radiant spirit, a brilliant mind, a warm heart, and valiant courage.
None knew her but to love her;
None named her but to praise.
Of Scottish parentage, she wars born in New Zealand in 1889, the eldest daughter of the late Mr and of Mrs W. H. Cameron. She leaves a sister, Mrs C. L. Purdie, and four brothers (Keith, Alex., Clive, and Stuart), all of whom served throughout the late war.
Gladys Cameron gave early evidence of unusual mental capacity, being dux of her class at both the Kaikorai School and the Otago Girls’ High School, where she was also winner of special prizes. She entered Otago University in 1907 with a junior university scholarship, and in her first, year won the Parker Memorial Medal. In 1909 she was winner of the Stuart prize in physics, and completed her B.Sc. degree, holding the senior scholarship in zoology. She obtained the Master of Science degree with first-class honors in zoology in 1911. The professor in charge of the subject states that she was probably the most brilliant scholar who has passed through his department.
Though she won many honors and prizes, they came as incident rather than objective, and were received in a spirit of humility which recognised the limitations of all human knowledge. She had the artist’s appreciation of the wonders which her subject revealed. Her scientific studies served to strengthen her deeply religious character.
Her first staff appointment was at the Gore High School. Leaving there, she took the appointment of science mistress at the Methodist Ladies’ College, Melbourne. In 1911 T Miss Cameron entered the home science department, obtaining the bachelor’s degree in that subject in two years, and winning the highest commendations of the dean. After teaching at the Wellington Girls’ College, she was called to the University of Otago in 1917 and made lecturer in bacteriology and hygiene. She acted as director of this department in 1920 and 1921, during the absence and illness of the professor, lecturing to the medical and home science students in addition to administering the department. Such heavy responsibility, in addition to the anxiety for those at the war, unquestionably contributed to the undermining of her health. She was one of those whose war service, though less spectacular, was as truly great as those who fought at the front.
Miss Cameron was the first New Zealand woman to be awarded the Rockefeller international Fellowship. In 1924 she went abroad, studied at the University of Chicago, and carried on research in soil analysis. She also travelled in Britain and Europe. During this time she represented the New Zealand Federation of University Women, being a member of the Executive Council, at the World Conference held in Oslo, Norway. At this conference, where twenty-three nationalities were represented, comments were made on the excellent contribution made by Miss Cameron. She was the first national secretary of the New Zealand Federation, and at the time of her death secretary for the Committee on International Relations, having in the meantime served as president of the Otago branch of the Federation of University Women.
Her intellectual and social abilities qualified her for intercourse with the best minds, and at this world conference she was able to respond in a way highly creditable to her country women. Entertained by the King and Queen of Norway, the King and Queen of Belgium, and by the President of the United States, she gave a vivid account of these meetings and of the conferences upon her return to New Zealand just two years ago.
Miss Cameron resumed her work at the Medical School in 1926, but was compelled by illness to resign at the close of the year. Literally hundreds of students who came in touch with her gracious personality will mourn her loss. The loss is not only that of a scientist, but of a truly beautiful woman of lofty ideals.
Her delight in words and in rhythm gave her a command in language whose delicate discrimination was a joy to listen to. It was the literary side of her nature that was perhaps most widely known and loved by her many friends. Her after-dinner speeches had a flavor all their own — a curiously happy blend of humor, perspicacity, and idealism, with a felicity of phrasing which carried her message to the heart as well as the mind of her audience. Her speech at the federation banquet held in Washington, D.C.. was voted the wittiest, and her contributions at the council’s meetings of the federation which she attended in both Brussels and Vienna made a lasting impression. She truly exemplified “sweetness and light,” combined with insight, appreciation, and love of “whatsoever things are true, whatsoever things are honorable, whatsoever things are just, whatsoever things are pure, whatsoever things are lovely, whatsoever things are of good report.”
She was not content to be a passive recipient of the love and care of her exceptionally devoted family, but always she followed the urge to attain the larger issues of life and serve the cause of womankind. Highly endowed, thoroughly trained, clearly inspired, she stood on the threshold of large achievements. Only those who have been in close communion with her can realise the loss she is to the wide issues of life for which she strove — international understanding, peace and good-will to the world.
Oliver Wendell Holmes, who also combined the knowledge and training of the scientist with poetic genius, furnishes us appropriately a simile taken from zoology, in his poem ‘The Chambered Nautilus,’ which exemplifies the mental and spiritual growth of this beautiful character:
Build thee more stately mansions, O my soul!
As the swift seasons roll,
Leave thy low vaulted past.
Let each new temple, nobler than the last,
Shut thee from heaven with a dome more vast,
Till thou at length art free,
Leaving thine outgrown shell on life's unresting sea. -Evening Star, 121/2/1928.
Before the ordinary business was proceeded with at the monthly meeting of the Otago University Council yesterday after noon the Chancellor (Mr T K Sidey, MO) referred in feeling terms to the death of Miss Gladys Cameron, and moved as follows: — “That the Council of the University of Otago expresses its deep sorrow on learning of the death of Miss Gladys Christian Mary Cameron. Miss Cameron was a distinguished student of the University of Otago, where she obtained the degrees of M.Sc, and B.Sc. in Home Science together with other distinctions. In 1917 she was appointed assistant to the professor of bacteriology, a position which she occupied with great success until at the end of 1926 she was compelled through ill health to resign her post. To Miss Cameron's relatives the Council expresses its most sincere sympathy." The motion was carried, the members standing for a few moments in silence. -Otago Daily Times, 14/2/1928.
Gladys Cameron's death at 39, two years after resigning her post due to ill health, would suggest a lingering fatal illness. Tuberculosis, a slow and inexorable killer, is a likely culprit.
Who knows what further success she might have had; what an ornament to the City of Dunedin she might have been; had there been a cure then for whichever disease ended her life at the age of 39.
Andersons Bay Cemetery, Dunedin.