From: Women Jewelers of the British Arts and Crafts Movement by Toni Lesser Wolf The Journal of Decorative and Propaganda Arts Vol. 14 (Autumn, 1989), pp. 28-45 (18 pages) "in 1902 Arthur ( Gaskin ) succeeded R. Catterson-Smith as head of the Vittoria Street School of Jewelers and Silversmiths in Birmingham where he was to remain until 1924. His students included Kate M. Eadie, who was mostly influenced by Fisher ( and her husband Sydney Meteyarde, who was also a jeweler), a Mrs Hadaway and Margaret Awdry, who made a necklace whose design has been attributed to William Morris (30). This is quite probably the only piece of jewellery Morris ever designed. this was exhibited at Grafton Galleries in 1906. 30. A book entitled "By Hammer and Hand" the Arts and Crafts Movement in Brmingham ed.Alan Crawford (Birmngham Museum and Art Gallery) 1984 p 114 states "Margaret Awdry has attracted some attention more recently because The Studio in 1906 illustrated a pendant and chain as "the design of William Morris completed by Margaret Awdry"; it seems likely that Awdry's collaborated was not the William Morris, but a student at Vittoria Street who rejoiced in the same name.