Camille Vidart

In 1879, apparently because the examiners thought from her first name that she was a man, she was admitted to the entrance competition for the girls' high school (Höhere Töchterschule) in Zürich.

[2][4] She completed her career as a teacher at the École Vinet in Lausanne (1884–1886), moving there to care for an aunt in poor health.

In the mid-1880s, she visited the United States with the feminist Harriet Clisby who subsequently supported women's rights in Geneva.

Cpreparing for the Congrès des intérêts féminins which formed part of the 1896 Swiss National Exhibition in Geneva.

In February 1915 in Geneva, together with Clara Guthrie d'Arcis and others,[5] she helped to found the World Union for International Concord.

Vidart, c. 1890