Other names

Susie

Place of birth

Calcutta (Kolkata), India

Date of arrival to Britain

Location(s)

'Kidderpore' House
8 Bedford Park
Croyden
CR0 2BS
United Kingdom
Newnham College
CB3 9DF
United Kingdom

Place of death

Lahore, India (Pakistan)

Date of time spent in Britain

1874–1918 (with spells in India during this period)

About

Susila Bonnerjee (known as Susie) was the daughter of W. C. Bonnerjee and his wife, Hemangini. Born in India, she first moved to England as a child and lived in the family house in Croydon. Her parents travelled between England and India frequently with the intention of educating all their children in England. Susila attended the Croydon High School for Girls and then gained admission to Newnham College, Cambridge in 1891 (as her sister had). Susila was awarded a second class in her Part 1 exams in 1894. She then joined the London School of Medicine for Women and was attached to the Royal Free Hospital. Susila gained her MB degree in 1899.

A little later she returned to India and worked in Calcutta and at the St Stephen's Mission at Delhi. After her father's death in 1906, Susila took up research work at Cambridge. She was Demonstrator of Physiology in Balfour Laboratory, Newnham College, 1910–12, and was in private practice at Ealing for five years. In 1911 she became Secretary of the Indian Women’s Education Association, which was involved in raising funds to educate Indian women in England in methods of teaching. During the war, in 1915, she went to Calcutta but returned to England in early 1916. She left for India again in 1918 due to declining health and died in September 1920 in Lahore.

Indian Women's Education Association's promotion of Kumar Sambhava or The Coming of the Prince, Court Theatre, March 1912

W. C. Bonnerjee, Janaki Agnes Majumdar (sister).

Through the Indian Women's Education Association: Countess of Minto (President), Lady Lyall and Princess Sophia Duleep Singh (Vice-President), Maharani of Cooch Behar, B. Bhola-Nauth, Sarala Ray, Lolita Roy.

Majumdar, Janaki Agnes Penelope, Family History, ed. by Antoinette Burton (New Delhi: Oxford University Press, 2003)

Visram, Rozina, Asians in Britain: 400 Years of History (London: Pluto, 2002)

London School of Medicine for Women Archives, Royal Free Hospital Archives Centre, London

Newnham College Archives, Newnham College, Cambridge

Sir William Wedderburn mentions Miss Bonnerjee in a letter to Mrs Fawcett, 25 Feb 1916, 7MGF/A/1/162, Women's Library, London School of Economics, London

Church League for Women's Suffrage meeting, Brighton 1913

Church League for Women's Suffrage meeting, Brighton 1913, TWL 2004 250, The Women's Library, LSE Library

No known copyright restrictions, https://www.flickr.com/photos/lselibrary/25200499798

Image credit

Church League for Women's Suffrage meeting, Brighton 1913, TWL 2004 250, The Women's Library, LSE Library

No known copyright restrictions, https://www.flickr.com/photos/lselibrary/25200499798

Citation: ‘Susila Anita Bonnerjee’, South Asian Britain, https://southasianbritain-demo.rit.bris.ac.uk/people/susila-anita-bonnerjee/. Accessed: 6 July 2025.

Except where otherwise noted, content on this site is licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0 International