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of the North of
Ireland Suffrage Society and other women, in 1874 Byers founded the Belfast Women's Temperance Association and Christian Workers' Union. Out of this developed the Belfast Prison Gate Mission for Women and the Victoria Homes for the Reclamation and Training of Neglected and Destitute
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In 1850, she married Rev. John Byers, a
Presbyterian missionary. They stopped for a short time in the United States before continuing to China as missionaries under the auspices of the American Presbyterian Church. In the U.S. Byers became acquainted with and became influenced by the idea that boys
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Byers became deeply interested in the conditions of Irish women and began efforts for their improvement. She founded and became director of
Victoria College, which was prominent in pioneer educational work. The institution began as a secondary school before college education for women had been
175:. Byers was involved in philanthropic work, with especial reference to the training of the young. She wrote many papers on different phases of the progress of girls' education in Ireland, on Irish industrial schools, and on
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and girls should receive a similar education. In 1853, widowed, she returned New York, connecting with
American religious women, and to Ireland in the following year at the behest of her mother, making her home in
195:, Northern Ireland, in April 1832. She was the only daughter of Andrew Morrow (died 1840), a temperance activist. Her mother was Margaret Herron Byers. She was educated privately, at Mrs. Treffry's school,
254:. She was the author of many papers on different phases of the progress of girls' education in Ireland and on Irish industrial schools and temperance. She received the degree of LL. D. from
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discussed. In 1878, she worked for the inclusion of girls in the benefits of the Irish
Intermediate act. In 1881, the
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woman to receive an honorary degree from a university. She was a member of the first senate of the
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Luddy, Maria (2004). "Byers , Margaret (1832–1912), educationist and temperance activist".
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Byers worked as a student teacher under Mrs. Treffry for a year prior to marriage.
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Engendering
Ireland: New Reflections on Modern History and Literature
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offered its examination and degrees to women. Byers was the first
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Barr, Rebecca Anne; Buckley, Sarah-Anne; Kelly, Laura (2015).
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187:Margaret Morrow was born in Windsor Hill,
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246:Margaret Byers' commemorative plaque
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636:Burials at Belfast City Cemetery
601:19th-century Irish women writers
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558:A Source Book for Irish English
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197:Nottingham
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119:missionary
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