Maria Elisabeth Bes
Maria Elisabeth Bes | |
---|---|
Born | Maria Elisabeth Stellwag-Bes January 14, 1882 |
Died | August 7, 1938[1] The Hague, South Holland, Netherlands | (aged 56)
Resting place | Jaffa Cemetery, Delft, South Holland, Netherlands |
Maria Elisabeth (Marie) Stellwag-Bes (January 14, 1882 – August 7, 1938)[1] was a Dutch chemical engineer and city councillor in Delft for the Vrijzinnig Democratische Bond. She is considered to be the first woman to receive an engineering diploma in the Netherlands and was one of the first three female city councillors in Delft.[2][3][4]
Early life and education[]
Bes was born in Tilburg in 1882, the daughter of Klaas Bes and Johanna Bes (née Stoel).[5] Her father worked as a mathematics teacher at the Tilburg secondary school. After completing her primary school education in 1894, Bes became the first female student in Tilburg to be admitted to the secondary school. Permission for this had to be sought from, and granted by the minister. In 1899, she successfully completed her final school exams,[6] and the following year she started as the first female student at the Polytechische School te Delft, studying in the Technology department.
On 27 July 1904, Bes graduated in chemical engineering from the Polytechnic, becoming the first female graduate engineer in the Netherlands. That same year, she was appointed as an assistant in physics at her former college, which was upgraded in status to a technical college and renamed the Technische Hoogeschool Delft in 1905, to emphasise the academic quality of the education. In 1910 Bes became an assistant for theoretical and applied physics there, and in 1919 she was appointed as a permanent member of staff. In 1926 she left her job because of health issues.[1][5]
Political career[]
In the 1910s, Bes became politically active, joining the Vrijzinnig Democratische Bond (VBD) (transl. Liberal Democratic League), a progressive liberal political party in the Netherlands. This led to Bes becoming was one of the founders of the national along with a number of women including Aletta Jacobs, a physician and leading women's suffrage activist. Bes was a member of the VBV's central board.[7]
In 1918, Bes ran as a candidate for the Liberal Democrats in the national Tweede Kamerverkiezingen elections held on the 21st May.[8] The election was the first held after a series of reforms, known as "the Great Pacification" which introduced universal male suffrage and proportional representation, replacing the previous first-past-the-post voting in single member constituencies. Women could stand for election but were not able to vote themselves, only gaining that right in 1919. The liberal parties lost the most seats and Bes was not elected.
The following year 1919 Bes became party leader for the VDB in the municipal elections in Delft. She received about two thirds of the total 182 votes cast for the party, and sat on the Delft city council until March 1920. She made a name for herself on the council as a campaigner for alcohol control.[5]
Marriage and death[]
On July 15, 1920, Bes married the Evangelical Lutheran pastor Theodoor Gotlieb Stellwag (1888-1935).[9] The couple lived in the presbytery of the Evangelical Lutheran Church, a historic building at 253 Oude Delft.
After her marriage, Bes became active at the Lutheran Church in Delft, where among other things she worked as a teacher in the Sunday school.
After the death of her husband in 1935, Bes moved, with her maid, to The Hague, where she died on August 7, 1938 at the age of 56. Bes was buried in the Jaffa cemetery in Delft on August 10, 1938.
Commemoration[]
The Marie Besstraat, a street in Delft, was named after her in 1988.
In 2017, Marie Bes was awarded a place in the Alumni Walk of Fame,[10] created to celebrate the 175th anniversary of TU Delft, to celebrate her place as the first woman to graduate as an engineer from the University.
References[]
- ^ Jump up to: a b c "Chemisch Weekblad, Vol. 35". Chemisch Weekblad. 35: 682. 1938.
- ^ Bosch, M. (1998-01-01). "M. Damme-van Weele, J. van Ressing-Wolfert, L. Schuit, Vrouwen in techniek. 90 Jaar Delftse vrouwelijke ingenieurs". BMGN: Low Countries Historical Review. 113 (1): 132. doi:10.18352/bmgn-lchr.4661. ISSN 2211-2898.
- ^ H.M. Bonebakker e.a. (1975). Delftse vrouwen van vroeger door Delftse vrouwen van nu. VOC Delft.
- ^ M.A. van Damme-van Weele en J.H.M. Ressing-Wolfert (1989). Vrouwen in techniek, 90 jaar Delftse vrouwelijke ingenieurs. Deltech.
- ^ Jump up to: a b c Bes, Jaap (2019). Maria Elisabeth (Marie) Bes: eerste vrouwelijke ingenieur en eerste vrouwelijke gemeenteraadslid te Delft (in Dutch).
- ^ de Veer, J (2008). "De eerste meisjes en leraressen aan de Rijks-HBS Willem ll".
- ^ "Vrijzinnig Democratische Vrouwenclub". Amersfoortsch Dagblad / De Eemlander. 28 September 1917.
- ^ "Tweede Kamerverkiezingen". Amersfoortsch Dagblad / De Eemlander. 4 March 1918.
- ^ "Marriage certificate, Delft, July 15, 1920".
- ^ "Maria Elisabeth Bes". Historische Alumni Lustrumuitgave 2017. TU Delft, Alumni Walk of Fame.
Further reading[]
- Maria Bes op Het Geheugen van Tilburg, 19 oktober 2010.
- Maria Elisabeth Bes op tudelft.nl.
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Maria Elisabeth Bes. |
- 1882 births
- 1938 deaths
- 20th-century Dutch engineers
- 20th-century Dutch politicians
- 20th-century Dutch women politicians
- Chemical engineers
- Delft University of Technology alumni
- Dutch women engineers
- Evangelical Lutheran Church Christians from the Netherlands
- Free-thinking Democratic League politicians
- Municipal councillors of Delft
- People from Tilburg
- 20th-century women engineers