Gladys Chatterjee
Gladys Mary Chatterjee, Lady Chatterjee OBE was a British teacher, schools inspector, and barrister, and the wife of Sir Atul Chandra Chatterjee.
Life
She was born in 1883. Her parents were Emily Angelina and Captain William Barnard Broughton. Her maternal grandfather, Sir Michael Filose, had designed Jai Vilas Mahal. Her father died while she was a child and her mother remarried Lt Colonel Ernest Frederick Cambier.She went to Bedford High School and she attended University College London where she enjoyed several scholarships as she gained a degree in philosophy. She gained a qualification to teach at Bedford College, London, but went to work at the Board of Trade as an investigator in 1912. In 1913 she went to India to work as an inspector of schools and returned during the war in 1916 to become a welfare officer in the Ministry of Munitions. For this work she earned one of the first OBE's as an "organiser of women’s welfare in national shell and national projectile factories".
She then took a doctorate at the London School of Economics in Women and Children in Indian Industry.
She married in 1924 and as a result she became Lady Chatterjee when her husband was knighted as he became the high commissioner for India in 1925. She was able to practise as a barrister after she was called to the Bar at Lincoln’s Inn in 1933.