Neligan was born in
Cork in 1833. She was the fifth child of Lieutenant Thomas Neligan. Despite having a soldier as a father she objected to war. She was educated at home, in Paris and Germany and she went on to work as a "finishing governess". She then did notable work leading nursing at the siege of
Metz during the
Franco Prussian War from 1870 to 1871. where she remained for 27 years. The school was backed by
Maria Georgina Grey and was part of the
Girls' Public Day School Company and it opened with 88 pupils. She had grabbed some ivy from the school walls for the girls to wear in their hair to be 'distinctive' at the first girls day schools' company prize giving. She lived (as recorded in the 1881 Census), as head of the household of women (presumably staff) at the school in St. Leonard's Lodge, Wellesly Road. And Neligan became the vice-president of the Association of Headmistresses (of independent girls schools) in 1893. After she retired she took an interest in women's suffrage, in June 1909 going to a protest at the
House of Commons. And she had had a silver teapot seized by officials, after she refused to pay local taxes in protest at having no representation. Becoming a member of the
Women's Tax Resistance League, her regular 'refusal' behaviour became known in the local press headlines: 'Miss Heligan's Hardy Annual' or 'No Surrender'. She was also said to have been willing to be imprisoned, even if subscribing to the WSPU became illegal, but she never was imprisoned, although she was arrested in 1910. ==Black Friday==