Agatha Mary Harrison (1885–1954) was an English industrial welfare reformer and unofficial diplomat.
She found child labour and she managed the difficult task of persuading employers to stop this exploitation.
She spent long periods in India working so closely with Gandhi that she was a go-between during his hunger strike in 1939.
[1] Harrison died in Geneva in 1954 at a peace conference held to discuss the French Indochina War[2] and she was buried locally.
The Indian government founded a scholarship in Harrison's name at St Antony's College, Oxford.