Constance Fligg Elam was born in
New Barnet, Hertfordshire, the daughter of surgeon William Henry Elam, and Lydia Coombes. She was educated at
Saint Felix School, Southwold before studying engineering at
Newnham College, Cambridge (1912). In 1915 she joined the Metallurgical Department of the
National Physical Laboratory in Teddington, but moved in 1916 to the
Royal School of Mines, where in 1917 she was appointed research assistant to Sir Harold Carpenter and, in 1921, elected to the Frecheville Research Fellowship. It was subsequently arranged that she should work at the
Cavendish Laboratory, Cambridge. In 1923, under the name C. F. Elam she received the
Royal Society's Bakerian Medal with
G. I. Taylor. Unfortunately, the Royal Society had not realized that she was a woman and their dinner club did not allow women attendees. In 1924 she was appointed to the first Research Fellowship in Metallurgy given by the
Worshipful Company of Armourers and Braziers. In 1927, Elam attended the Second (Triennial) Empire Mining and Metallurgical Congress, held in
Montreal, Canada, between 22 August and 28 September. She wrote of the congress and her impressions of her two months travelling in Canada and America for The Woman Engineer journal, published by the British
Women's Engineering Society, of which she was a member. In 1928, Elam married George Tipper, a graduate of Clare College, Cambridge, and the superintendent of the Geological Survey in India. When she left the Royal School of Mines in 1929, with a DSc, she settled in Cambridge and continued her work there for over 30 years. Tipper was appointed as a lecturer in the department of engineering from 1939, as one of the first women lecturers in the university at a time when many male lecturers went off to wartime work. == Research ==