Eleanor Honnywill | |
Birth Name: | Eleanor Biscoe |
Birth Date: | 1919/1920 |
Death Date: | 11 April 2003 |
Spouse: | Sir Vivian Fuchs (m. 1991) |
Notable Works: | The Challenge of Antarctica, 1969 |
Eleanor Honnywill (– 11 April 2003; Biscoe,[1] later Eleanor, Lady Fuchs) was instrumental in supporting the work of British Antarctic Survey (BAS).
Honnywill won the 1975 Fuchs Medal of the British Antarctic Survey (BAS) in recognition of her service to the BAS and its predecessor the Falklands Islands Dependencies Survey (FIDS).[2] She had been secretary to the 1955-58 Commonwealth Trans-Antarctic Expedition, based in the expedition's London headquarters.
In 1958, she moved to FIDS as personal assistant to Vivian Fuchs when he took up the directorship, and worked with him on the expedition's papers and his Of Ice and Men (1982, Anthony Nelson;), the history of the FIDS and BAS.[3]
Honnywill Peak in the Shackleton Range in Antarctica is named for her.
Her book The Challenge of Antarctica was published in 1969 (Methuen,) and republished in 1984 (Anthony Nelson,).
She married Captain Richard Buston Honnywill, a naval officer. After his death, and that of Lady Joyce Fuchs in 1990, she married Sir Vivian Fuchs (1908-1999) on 8 August 1991.[4]