Moyal worked as a research assistant to
Lord Beaverbrook from 1954 to 1958, while he was working on
Men and Power 1917–1918. She checked sources and wrote drafts, working with him at his London penthouse, his country estate
Cherkley Court, and his villa at
Cap-d'Ail, France. In her memoirs she recalled being asked to entertain
Winston Churchill at Cap-d'Ail by swimming laps in a pool. Beaverbrook sacked her when she informed him she would be marrying for a second time. In 1996, she curated an exhibition on Australian scientists for the
National Portrait Gallery. She was appointed
Member of the Order of Australia (AM) in 1993 for her "contribution to the history of Australian science and technology especially the writing of its history", and also received the
Centenary Medal. She was awarded honorary
Doctor of Letters degrees from ANU (2003) and the University of Sydney (2007). ==Bibliography==