Kathleen D. Gordon-Gray Explained

Kathleen Dixon Gordon-Gray
Image Upright:24 January 1918, Pietermaritzburg, died 13 January 2012
Birth Name:Kathleen Dixon Huntley
Birth Date:24 January 1918
Birth Place:Pietermaritzburg
Death Place:Pietermaritzburg
Other Names:Kath
Citizenship:South African
Nationality:South African
Fields:Botany
Workplaces:University of Natal
Alma Mater:University of Natal
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Known For:Taxonomy of Acacia, Cassia, Cyperaceae, and Gramineae
Spouse:Claude Gordon Gordon-Gray
Relations:Maj Gordon Gordon-Gray MC DSO (father in law); Cmdt John Louis Gordon-Gray DSO (brother in law)
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Children:Celia Gordon-Gray

Kathleen Dixon Gordon-Gray (née Huntley) (born 24 January 1918, Pietermaritzburg, died 13 January 2012, Pietermaritzburg) was a South African botanist, plant collector, and educator noted for her expertise in the flora of Natal. She worked as both a lecturer and professor of botany at the University of Natal. In 1998 she was awarded the Senior (Silver) Medal of the South African Association of Botanists. Her research publications primarily covered the taxonomy of Acacia, Cassia, Cyperaceae, and Gramineae.

Education and career

Gordon-Gray was born in Pietermaritzburg where she attended Pietermaritzburg Girls' High School and the Natal University College of the University of South Africa. She completed her B.Sc. (Botany & Chemistry) in 1937, followed by an M.Sc. (Botany) in 1939 and PhD (Botany) in 1959.

She taught Biology at the Girls' Collegiate School from 1940 to 1945 and was appointed the Herbarium Assistant in 1946. In 1951 she was appointed Lecturer in the department of Botany at the University of Natal. She held the post of Senior lecturer from 1967 to 1976 and from 1977 until her mandatory retirement in 1978, Associate Professor.

Gordon-Gray donated a sum of money to the University of Natal to establish the Kathleen Gordon-Gray Prize for the Best Third-Year Student in Plant Systematics.She continued to work after her retirement and was involved in fieldwork until 1965, during which time she collected approximately 4000 specimens of flora. An undiagnosed injury to her femur that she had sustained in her youth severely restricted her mobility later in life but she continued to catalogue materials supplied by fellow botanists, students and friends.

In 1998 she received the Senior (Silver) Medal from the South African Association of Botanists.

Her major publications involved Cyperaceae, Poaceae, Acacia and Cassia but her interest and expertise included many vascular plant families and other fields such as Paleobotany.

She was still engaged in a collaboration with Jane Browning and C.J. Ward to prepare a joint article for publication up to a few days before her death in January 2012.

Selected publications