Ann Moyal


Ann Veronica Helen Moyal AM FAHA was an Australian historian known for her work in the history of science. She held academic positions at the Australian National University, New South Wales Institute of Technology, and Griffith University, and later worked as an independent scholar.

Early life

Moyal was born on 23 February 1926 in Northbridge, Sydney, New South Wales. Her father was a bank teller. She grew up in Sydney, but was sent to Canberra High School for her final year of secondary schooling. She graduated Bachelor of Arts with first-class honours from the University of Sydney, and was subsequently awarded a scholarship to the University of London. However, she abandoned her postgraduate studies after a year to become a research assistant.

Career

Moyal worked as a research assistant to Lord Beaverbrook from 1954 to 1958, while he was working on Men and Power 1917–1918. She checked sources and wrote drafts, working with him at his London penthouse, his country estate Cherkley Court, and his villa at Cap-d'Ail, France. In her memoirs she recalled being asked to entertain Winston Churchill at Cap-d'Ail by swimming laps in a pool. Beaverbrook sacked her when she informed him she would be marrying for a second time. After returning to Australia, Moyal declined a PhD scholarship to the Australian National University and instead became the inaugural assistant editor of the university's Australian Dictionary of Biography, under Keith Hancock. Manning Clark described her as "one of the unsung heroines in the turbulent years" of the project. She left the dictionary in 1962 to become a research associate at the Australian Academy of Science and the ANU Research School of Social Sciences.
Moyal's later career focused on the history of science. She was a science editor with University of Chicago Press and from 1972 lectured at the New South Wales Institute of Technology. A 1975 article on the Australian Atomic Energy Commission "made her reputation as the leading Australian expert on the history of atomic energy in Australia ". From 1977 to 1979 she was the director of the Centre for Science Policy at Griffith University. Moyal's later career was conducted as an independent scholar, and in 1995 she helped establish the Independent Scholars Association of Australia; she served as the organisation's president until 2000. In 1996, she curated an exhibition on Australian scientists for the National Portrait Gallery.

Honours

Moyal was a Fellow of the Royal Society of New South Wales and the Australian Academy of the Humanities. She was appointed Member of the Order of Australia in 1993 for her "contribution to the history of Australian science and technology especially the writing of its history", and also received the Centenary Medal. She was awarded honorary Doctor of Letters degrees from ANU and the University of Sydney.

Personal life

Moyal married three times: to Michael Cousins in 1951, to Colonel Everest Mozley in 1957, and to mathematician José Enrique Moyal in 1962. She took her husband's name on each occasion. Her first two marriages ended in divorce, and she was widowed in 1998.
Moyal died on 21 July 2019, aged 93.