Betty Hanson was born as Betty Lucas in Peel, Isle of Man in 1918. When she was 18 she went to Avery hill Teachers Training College in Elthom. She then won an art scholarship to the Slade, but due to the 2nd world war her father insisted that she went to Liverpool college of art instead, because it was closer to her home. After 6 months she became a teacher in a school in Scotland road because the London blitz had started. She became a fire fighter at night and eventually won a defence medal. After the war she chose teaching as her profession. Betty Hanson taught at both St John's primary school and Douglas High School, where she taught art, history, home economics and English. Betty Hanson's late husband, Eric Hanson who fought in Berma, also pursued a career in education, serving as the head teacher of St Thomas's School for 27 years before joining the Albert Road Junior School in Ramsey.
Politics
Hanson entered the political realm when she joined the Isle of Man's Board of Education as a non-Tynwald member, where she served from 1971 until 1974. Following her election to the House of Keys in 1974, Hanson returned to chair the Board of Education as a full Tynwald member from 1976 until 1981. Hanson oversaw the creation of Queen Elizabeth II High School, the first secondary school in the western portion of the Isle of Man, and personally escorted the school's namesake, Queen Elizabeth II, on a tour of the facility in 1979. She served as the chairman and chief planner of the Tynwald's Millennium Committee celebrations in 1979. In the weeks prior to the celebration, Hanson traveled to the United States as chairman, where she was instrumental in the establishment of the North American Manx Awards, which are still overseen by the Manx Board of Education. The awards were founded by Hanson and others as a way to acknowledge artistic achievements in Manx music, language, arts, culture and crafts. Betty Hanson became the first woman ever elevated to the Legislative Council of the Isle of Man in 1982, a post she held until 1988. She continued to serve as governor of St Thomas's Café Primary School until her death in 2008. She was also the honorary vice president of the World Manx Association.