She did research on the properties of selenium which was published in 1926.[1]
She and a fellow demonstrator at the university, Edgar Booth wrote a textbook together about physics for high school students.[2] Their book, Physics, Fundamental Laws and Principles with Problems and Worked Solutions was published in 1931.[3][4] She was still living at the Women's College and in 1933 she became its sub-principal. She was known as Philly Nic and for being a spinster in a hurry and dressing without care. Conversely she told her students that they would gain confidence if they dressed smartly for examinations. Nicol was undervalued and overlooked.[5] The leading cricketer Betty Archdale was the college's principal from 1946 and she also served on the university's senate.[6]
Harry Messel joined the University of Sydney as Professor of physics in 1952 and in that year Nicol applied to be a senior lecturer. Her application was unsuccessful. All the department's staff designated as temporary had their grades assessed by a senate committee in 1953. Messel wrote well of Nicol's ability to coach students but he did not consider her a lecturer. In the same year she had a mastectomy. She left the Women's College in 1954, and her position as sub-principal, to move to the Sydney suburb of Lane Cove to live with her sister.[5]
Death and legacy
Nicol's physics 1931 book with Edgar Booth achieved its 16th edition in 1962.[4] She died in her home in Lane Cove in 1964 of cancer. She had resigned from the department, that she had joined in 1921 as a student, a few days before her death.[7]
^Mitchell, Bruce, "Edgar Harold Booth (1893–1963)", Australian Dictionary of Biography, Canberra: National Centre of Biography, Australian National University, retrieved 2024-01-01
^ abAnnable, Rosemary, "Phyllis Mary Nicol (1903–1964)", Australian Dictionary of Biography, Canberra: National Centre of Biography, Australian National University, retrieved 2024-01-01