Dorothy Banks
Dorothy Banks was an English naturalist and shell-collector who was one of the originators of Hergest Croft Garden, Kington.
She was born in 1865 to clergyman Bradley Hurt Alford and his wife Caroline, née Lyall, and raised in London. Her older sister was the classicist Margaret Alford.
Like Margaret, Dorothy attended Girton College, Cambridge, where she gained a first in the Natural Sciences tripos in 1885–8. Her Director of Studies was conchologist Alfred Hands Cooke, and she worked and corresponded with William Bateson, John Read le Brockton Tomlin and Thomas McKenny Hughes. She received no degree, and in 1887 collected signatures for a petition for Cambridge to allow full university membership to women so that they could gain degrees.
In 1893, she married her course-mate, the banker and plant photographer William Hartland Banks. They had a son, Richard Alford Banks, and three daughters.