The denial of equal educational opportunities to women is arguably one of the great injustices in British history. In Willingly to School, Mary Cathcart Borer charts the gradual reversal of this inequality, and the revolutionary effect it has had on social structures, from the Anglo-Saxons to the twentieth century. Always mindful of the historical context of each period, Borer explores the significant early role of the church, the opportunities afforded to royal and noble girls, the origins of the various forms of privately and charitably funded school, and the emergence of the modern school system. Along the way, particular significant institutions and individuals such as Christ's Hospital, Cheltenham Ladies College, the Bronte sisters and Fanny Burney are examined in depth. Writing in 1975, Borer described the mid-twentieth century as having 'seen the culmination of women's demands for full equality in society'. While the intervening years have shown that there is still much work to be done in the pursuit of equality, Borer's analysis of the progress that has been made in women's education remains as pertinent as ever.
Born in London in 1906, Mary Irene Cathcart Borer - known by her married name, Molly Myers, although she used the names Mary Cathcart Borer and M. Cathcart Borer for her writing - received her BSc from London University, and worked a variety of jobs before the Second World War, when she became involved in script-writing for the British film industry. She worked for a time as the story editor and script-writer for the Rank Children's Film Foundation, going on to freelance work writing scripts and plays for television, theater, radio and films. She died in 1994, in St. Albans, Hertfordshire.