The Strangeways Research Laboratory,
Cambridge, was an independent world-renowned research institution. Due to the lack of funds in 1908, it was forced to shut down, but reopened the following year. After Thomas Strangeways' unexpected death in 1926, the future of his research facility, then known as the Cambridge Research Hospital, was in doubt. After advocacy by Fell and collaborator
F.G. Spear, the institution's trustees decided to keep the research group open, with funding from the
Medical Research Council. Fell was named the new director in 1928 and the institution's name was changed to the
Strangeways Research Laboratory in honor of its founder. A great reason to appoint Fell was she did not require salary. Fell was funded by the Beit Memorial Fellowship and supported by the Royal Society Research Fellowship. The researchers who worked at the laboratory were never funded by the funds from the research lab, which were obtained from different sources. Fell served as director until 1970 when she was succeeded by
Michael Abercrombie. During that time, she also maintained an active research program in
tissue and
organ culture.—it developed an international reputation for tissue culture, cell biology, and
radiobiology, and attracted large numbers of visiting scientists; in one tabulation, visitors from 32 different countries were recorded. including Australian zoologist
Margaret Hardy. Fell's skill in networking and administration is widely considered a major contributor to the success of the laboratory. ==Retirement==