Peggy Hodges OBE, Aeronautical Engineer

First Posted On The Herts. Hidden Heroines Project Website: 12th August 2016

Pencil Drawing of Peggy Hodges by Joanna Scott Illustrator
Copyright Joanna Scott Illustrator

St Albans

Margaret (Peggy) Hodges 1921 – 2008

From the Girton College Annual Review 20009 (140th Anniversary of Girton College Cambridge). Taken from an interview published in the Girton Newsletter, 2002.

Peggy Hodges read Natural Sciences and graduated from Girton in 1942. She then went to work at Standard Telephone and Cable, London, in the aircraft laboratory, where she concentrated on communications equipment. After eight years she moved to the GEC Applied Electronic Laboratories in Stanmore, Middlesex, to work in the Guided Weapon Division. Necessarily most of her work there was secret, but she ‘starred’ in a BBC film shot in the late 1960s at the MoD guided-missile firing range at Aberporth in Wales and featuring her work.

At this time she was made an Associate Fellow of the Royal Aeronautical Society and was elected to a Fellowship of the Society in 1969 – then one of only three female fellows.

 

In 1970 she received the Whitney-Straight Award for outstanding performance by a woman in the field of Aeronautics. This award comprised a specially commissioned sculpture by Dame Barbara Hepworth, presented by HRH the Prince of Wales at the Royal Aeronautical Society. Two years later she was gazetted OBE in the Queen’s Birthday Honours.
After her retirement from active engineering Peggy became involved in the Caroline Haskett Trust set up to encourage girls, by means of scholarships and competitions, to take up careers in engineering, Peggy was chairman of the Trust for many years.

 

In 1978 she was also involved in the setting up, by the Institution of Electrical and Electronics Incorporated Engineers, of a new annual competition for what was then known as the Girl Technician Engineer of the Year.

 

This was targeted at qualified female incorporated electrical engineers aged between 20 and 30. Peggy was on the adjudicating panel for the ensuing 20 years. For her support and work in this the Institution made Peggy an Honorary Fellow.

Peggy was President of the Women’s Engineering Society 1972-1973.
Peggy was President of Soroptimist International St Albans and District 1966-1967 and 1982-1983.
When Peggy died, she provided a legacy for Soroptimist International St Albans and District. From 2010 to 2013, in memory of Peggy, this legacy funded the “Peggy Hodges Prize” for the highest performing female student completing the second year of a full time MEng/BEng Engineering degree at the University of Hertfordshire.

 

Click the link for Information on the: Herts Hidden Heroines Project 

This page was added on 09/12/2016.

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  • I wonder if anyone knows how I can contact Peggy’s family. I’m working on an artwork inspired by Peggy for an exhibition later this year in St Albans.

    By Maggie Hands (13/02/2024)
  • Please note that Peggy’s name was not Margaret – just Peggy Lilian Hodges …She would have been horrified to know that people now think her name was Margaret !
    I am her cousin and next of kin and hold her birth and death certificates.

    By Mrs Valentine (25/11/2022)
  • I’m delighted and inspired to read this page and learn more about Peggy Hodges. I was also President of the Women’s Engineering Society and have heard Peggy’s name many times but didn’t realise she was a fellow Hertfordshire resident. Thank your for posting this. Dawn Bonfield.

    By Dawn Bonfield MBE (16/02/2018)