Upated February 2023
She is now aged 99 and an Emerita Professor of Geography from King's College, London, according to her Wikipedia entry. There is also another GA link with King's College.
Alice is particularly noted for directing the 1960s Second Land Use Survey of Britain and for analyses of land use planning and urban design which have influenced the design of residential developments since the 1980s.
The 2nd Land Use Survey of Britain followed on from that led by Dudley Stamp, but was more detailed in its approach.
As I have previously reported from the Thanet Branch Centenary document: (PDF download from this link)
"In late 1955, Alice Coleman, of King’s College London came to the now defunct Medway Towns branch of the Geographical Association to speak about the then unexplored aspects of the Moon. Marjorie Woodward at the time was the Secretary of the branch. Both had been educated at Clarendon House Grammar School (Photo 2 in Appendix A) for Girls and both Marjorie and Alice had their roots in the Isle of Thanet. After a geographical discussion, each promised one another that if ever either of them should return to live there, they would form a branch of the Geographical Association. After the meeting of these 2 ladies, the birth of the Isle of Thanet Geographical Association was quite sudden. A pilot committee was set up in November 1955 where it was decided that the new GA Branch would be open to all who were interested in the post-war developing world. Students would be particularly welcome and take part in the increasingly popular fieldwork with excursions to a wider area and that a magazine would be published."
After many meetings of the committee consisting of Alice Coleman and Marjorie Woodward, George Wooster and Ken Girkin of Chatham House Grammar School, Peggy Hopkins of Clarendon House Grammar School, Ken Maggs, then in the Army, and Alan Kay of Margate, the first meeting of the Branch took place at Charles Dickens School in Broadstairs on 30th January 1956. A classroom had been booked but so many people arrived at the meeting that chairs had to be hastily removed to the Assembly Hall for the meeting to convene. Friends were quickly co-opted as committee members to help with the collection of the subscriptions; 80 signed on as members on that first night. Despite the inclement snowy weather, a triumphant Committee celebrated next day at the “Little Vienna” cafĂ© on Broadstairs Jetty.
She was President from 1955 onwards and her name is scattered throughout the Branch history for the next 60 years!
She attended the 1993 Centenary weekend of the GA as well. I have looked through the batch of photos that Sheila Jones sent on but can't see her shown there.
I purchased a copy of the 2nd Land Use Survey Handbook, which Alice Coleman wrote along with Ken Maggs from the Thanet Association.
The full story is told in the Thanet Centenary document:
In 1975, Alice Coleman won an award: "Woman in a Man's World", which is an award of its time, but very well deserved - hopefully there was some champagne involved.
Alice is an urban geographer, and I was very interested to see that she was also the subject of an article by one of the urbanists I most admire: Jane Jacobs, and that she actually popularised the idea of defensible space in urban planning in the UK.
What a service to the Association, and a life well lived.
References
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alice_Coleman
What a service to the Association, and a life well lived.
References
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alice_Coleman
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111/1468-2427.12047 - Jane Jacobs article on defensible space.
“The Geographical Association.” Geography, vol. 60, no. 2, 1975, pp. 146–152. JSTOR, www.jstor.org/stable/40568383. Accessed 8 Nov. 2020. - her award mentioned in the Annual report for 1975
“The Geographical Association.” Geography, vol. 60, no. 2, 1975, pp. 146–152. JSTOR, www.jstor.org/stable/40568383. Accessed 8 Nov. 2020. - her award mentioned in the Annual report for 1975
Updated section
This will be Alice Coleman's centenary year which will hopefully be marked in some way.
This article from Create Streets talks about her work with Margaret Thatcher to influence housing policy in the 1980s. (PDF download)
There are some images here (licensed) and here (Shutterstock) showing her at work.
Further research articles:
https://escholarship.org/uc/item/9sw3c9vf - details on her urban research
Her books can still be located:
Palaeolithic archaeology of the Stour and Alice Coleman
ReplyDeleteI am a PhD researcher at Durham University, my research seeks to answer long-standing questions on the antiquity of Palaeolithic flint implements from the gravels of the East Kent river Stour.
Alice Colemans 1951 paper 'Some Aspects of the Development of the Lower Stour, Kent' is hugely important in this study. Due to Alice's long-standing association with the Geographical Association and the Isle of Thanet Geographical Association, I'm wondering if you could help me, contact her or track down her archive?
I would particularly be interested in any original maps and survey plans associated with the 1951 paper.
Hi - I don't have details of specific answers to your queries, but the contact details for the Isle of Thanet branch are here: https://www.geography.org.uk/GA-Isle-of-Thanet-Branch
Delete