From Petticoats to Microscopes at Manchester Museum

Sara Jaspan, Exhibitions Editor
From Petticoats to Microscopes, courtesy of Manchester Museum, part of Wonder Women 2018
Courtesy of Manchester Museum

From Petticoats to Microscopes at Manchester Museum, Manchester 12 March 2018 Entrance is free

Manchester has been home to some incredible thinkers, activists, scientists and artists over the years, and is relatively good at celebrating them. But how much do you know about Marie Stopes, Margaret Murray or Adela Breton? Three pioneering ‘Wonder Women’ who helped shape Manchester Museum, the University of Manchester and, to some degree, the course of history.

In a talk delivered by Michelle Scott and Judith Fabian as part of Wonder Women 2018, From Petticoats to Microscopes will explore and champion the lives of these and other inspiring Manchester women, who either worked at the University, or whose collections have helped shape the Museum’s.

Marie Stopes (1880-1958) was an author and campaigner for women’s rights, who founded the first birth control clinic along with her second husband Humphrey Verdon Roe. She’s perhaps most famous for her 1918 publication ‘Married Love’, yet she began her career as a palaeobotanist working in Japan. Much of Stopes important collection is now housed at Manchester Museum, and illustrates the passion of this remarkable woman.

Margaret Murray (1863-1963) was an Anglo-Indian Egyptologist, archaeologist, anthropologist, historian, and folklorist, closely involved in the first-wave feminist movement. She became the first woman to be appointed as a lecturer in Archaeology in the United Kingdom, but is best known in Manchester for her lead role in the 1908 public unwrapping of Khnum-nakht – one of the famous mummies recovered from the Tomb of the Two Brothers. 110 years later and the mummy remains one of the crowning glories within Manchester Museum’s collection, where it sits on public display.

Adela Breton (1849-1923) was an English archaeological artist and explorer who eschewed marriage in favour of a life of travel. She is most famous for her work in Mexico, where she used her artistic skills to record friezes and carvings, most notably those of the Upper Temple of Jaguars at Chichen Itza. Breton is internationally recognised for her valuable contribution to Mesoamerican archaeology, and Manchester Museum now houses part of her archaeology collection.

Don’t miss this opportunity to find out more about the fascinating work and lives of these and other important Manchester women.

From Petticoats to Microscopes at Manchester Museum, Manchester 12 March 2018 Entrance is free

What's on at Manchester Museum

Wolf in Yellowstone
Until
ExhibitionsManchester
Wild at Manchester Museum

Manchester Museum explores the concept of ‘wild’ nature as a means of tackling the climate and biodiversity crisis in a new exhibition.

free entry

Where to go near From Petticoats to Microscopes at Manchester Museum

The Manchester Museum on Oxford Road Manchester
Manchester
Gallery
The Study
at Manchester Museum

Manchester Museum opened The Study on 11 September 2015. A reworking of the entire top floor of its historic Grade II*-listed building, The Study has been reimagined as a space designed to spark wonder, curiosity and a passion for research in all of its visitors.

Utility Gift Shop
Manchester
Shop
Utility Gift Shop

Utility Gift Shop on Oxford Road is all about products that are new, unique, quirky and cool. High street shopping at its best.

Manchester
Restaurant
San Carlo Fumo

San Carlo Fumo is a sun trap on St Peter’s Square, serving up traditional Italian food at its best

Manchester
Bar or Pub
Kro Bar

Kro Bar, Manchester is an independent pub and music venue housed (somewhat ironically) in the former Temperance Society building.

Universally Manchester Festival 6-9 June 2024
Manchester
The University of Manchester

Celebrating its 200th year in 2024, The University of Manchester is the largest single-site university in the UK, and boasts come incredible cultural institutions, found on campus, across Manchester and…

Manchester
Shop
Want Not Waste

Want Not Waste is a student-run, not-for-profit zero waste shop operating out of Academy 1 at the University of Manchester Students’ Union.

What's on: Festivals

Pride in Trafford
FestivalsManchester
Pride in Trafford 2025

Trafford’s six-day celebration of LGBTQ+ arts is back with performance, comedy, conversation and family fun across Sale and Altrincham.

from £0.00
Three men sit next to each other. One's head is bandaged, one holds a torch and one wears a sleepmask.
CinemaManchester
Wes World at HOME

Take a trip back into the world of Wes Anderson this May as HOME present a series of the acclaimed auteur’s most beloved films alongside The Phoenician Scheme.

from £7.95

Culture Guides

Theatre in Manchester and the North
Theatre in the North

Eclectic as ever. You'll find inventive reworkings, world-class contemporary dance and Greater Manchester's inaugural Improv Festival in our guide.

Image by Jonathan Schofield.
Tours and Activities in the North

We've got many a good time in store this month as we round up the best walking tours, cultural classes and makers markets in the land.

portrait of Lorsung in a dark shirt with dark hair and dark round glasses
Literature Events in the North

We've got laughs and we've got leftfield on the live literature radar this month. Something for everyone, from poets playing with form to short story writers looking long.

Sextile
Music in the North

Open air clubs, new festivals and long-awaited gigs. The North West's live music scene is heating up this spring. 

Classical Music in the North

Read our latest highlights from the live classical music offer in Manchester and the North, taking in a number of the region's most cherished orchestral forces and venues.

Laura Ellen Bacon, Into Being, 2025. Photo © India Hobson, courtesy Yorkshire Sculpture Park
Exhibitions in the North

Willow weaving, textile collages, digital arts and ecology - all this and more in our exhibition top picks this month

Three men sit next to each other. One's head is bandaged, one holds a torch and one wears a sleepmask.
Cinema in the North

Live scores, midnight movies and the latest from Wes Anderson are just some of our upcoming film highlights.