Maria Dickin

Animal welfare campaigner
The basics

Quick Facts

IntroAnimal welfare campaigner
Gender
Female
Birth22 September 1870, London
Death1 March 1951London (aged 80 years)
The details

Biography

Maria Elisabeth Dickin CBE (nickname, Mia; 22 September 1870 – 1 March 1951) was a social reformer and an animal welfare pioneer who founded the People's Dispensary for Sick Animals (PDSA) in 1917. Born in 1870 in London, she was the oldest of eight children; her parents were William George Dickin, a Wesleyan minister, and Ellen Maria (née Exell). She married her first cousin, Arnold Francis Dickin, an accountant, in 1899; they had no children. She enjoyed music, literary work and philanthropy. Dickin died in London in 1951 of influenzal broncho-pneumonia.

Legacy

Blue Plaque at Dickin's birthplace in Hackney.

The Dickin Medal is named after her.

A commemorative blue plaque was erected by English Heritage at Dickin's birthplace, 41 Cassland Road (formerly 1 Farringdon Terrace) in Hackney in October 2015.

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