We were sad to hear that Dame Stephanie Shirley, IT entrepreneur, businesswoman, philanthropist, and donor of the founding collection of the UK Philanthropy Archive here at Kent, passed away this weekend at the age of 91.
Dame Stephanie “Steve” Shirley was born in Germany in 1933 as Vera Buchthal. Her parents – Arnold Buchthal, a high-court judge, and his Austrian wife Mary – lived in a variety of places in Europe before settling near Vienna in Austria. After arriving in the UK as an unaccompanied child refugee on the Kindertransport in 1939, Dame Stephanie developed a remarkable drive and energy that led her to follow a career in mathematics and computing at a time that was unusual for girls and women. After experiencing sexism, increasing discrimination against her gender, missed promotions and unwanted sexual advances, Dame Stephanie decided to run her own software company. With £6 initial investment, she founded her company Freelance Programmers from her dining room table. While fairly successful, the company initially experienced difficulty in attracting work. All this changed when Dame Stephanie experimented in signing her business correspondence with the name “Steve” Shirley; her business greatly augmented and she became widely known as Steve from this point onwards. Freelance Programmers was later known as FI, then Xansa, and was later acquired by Steria now part of the Sopra Steria Group. In 25 years as the Chief Executive, Dame Stephanie developed the company into a leading business technology group which pioneered new work practices and changed the position of professional women along the way.
Dame Stephanie subsequently dedicated her time and resources to projects that she passionately believed in – advocating for women in the workplace and in technology, researching autism and supporting families of autistic children, and developing projects in computing and information technology. Dame Stephanie decided early on in her philanthropic career that she wanted to support funding and research during her lifetime and structured the Shirley Foundation to spend all of its funds by 2018. Her philanthropy, mainly delivered through the foundation, focussed principally on IT projects and autism research. Dame Stephanie and her husband Derek had one child, a son called Giles who was autistic and had epilepsy, and who sadly passed away in 1998. She set up two autism charities; Priors Court – a school, and Autism at Kingwood – supported living for adults. Realising the need for research to change the future for autistic people, she founded Autistica in 2004, the UK’s first national autism research charity. The Shirley Foundation spent out in October 2018, having made over £67m in grants over the life of the Foundation.
In 2019 she donated the archive of her charitable foundation – The Shirley Foundation – to the University of Kent to establish the UK Philanthropy Archive. She delivered the inaugural ‘Shirley lecture’ in 2021, an event which takes place every year at the University of Kent in collaboration with the Centre for Philanthropy.

Dame Stephanie Shirley depositing some of her collection with project archivist for the UK Philanthropy Archive, Beth Astridge.
Dame Stephanie received many accolades and awards during her lifetime. In 1980 she received an OBE for her services to Industry. In 1992 she was elected as the first women Master of the IT livery company, the Worshipful Company of Information Technologists, and was also the first women President of the chartered Computer Society. She was appointed a Fellow of the Royal Academy of Engineering in 2001. In the millennium honours Dame Stephanie was awarded with a DBE for services to IT. In 2003, she received the Beacon Fellowship Prize for her contribution to autism research and for her pioneering work in harnessing information technology for the public good. She was appointed the UK’s Ambassador for Philanthropy in 2009/2010, was assessed as one of the 100 most powerful women in the UK by Women’s Hour on BBC Radio 4 in 2013, and was awarded the Order of Companions of Honour (CH) in the Queen’s Birthday Honours in June 2017 for services to the IT industry and to philanthropy, one of only 65 Companions across the world. The University of Kent awarded Dame Stephanie an Honorary degree in 2022.
Dame Stephanie was a STEM pioneer, and an inspirational figure to girls and women who are passionate about STEM subjects. She led the way in autism research and made a considerable contribution to both the IT industry and philanthropy in her lifetime. Her incredible legacy will continue to not only inspire others but will change and impact many lives for years to come. We are proud to look after and facilitate access to the Papers of the Shirley Foundation and are forever indebted to Dame Stephanie for inaugurating the UK Philanthropy Archive.
Watch Dame Stephanie’s inspirational TED talk from 2015.
For any enquiries related to the Papers of the Shirley Foundation, please contact specialcollections@kent.ac.uk.







