Career
In June 1919, Margaret was employed as a typist in the Law School at the University of Sydney. By 1923, she was a clerk and the following year a Law Librarian, having taken on additional duties. As the majority of staff were part-time, Margaret assumed a central role in the faculty"s administration, providing a vital link between students and academics.
She proposed The Jubilee book of the Law School of the University of Sydney, 1890-1940 (1940) which records the first fifty years of the law school and during World World War II was secretary for the Law School Comforts Fund, sending monthly parcels of books to law students serving in the forces.
Keen to assist servicemen studying law by correspondence, she forwarded teaching materials and textbooks, and arranged tutoring and examinations. Hay"s career spanned the development of the Law School into a large postwar faculty, covering the changeover from John Peden"s deanship to that of Kenneth Shatwell.
Hay retired in December 1953 with a holiday in England and spent the following 60"s working part-time in the law library. She died on 10 December 1975 in the Scottish Hospital, Paddington and was cremated.
Her work was officially acknowledged in 1946 by a group of ex-service law graduates and undergraduates, with part of their gift of 100 pounds forming the foundation of the annual Margaret Dalrymple Hay Prize for Law, Lawyers and Justice.