THE hunt is on for the greatest Glaswegian of all time.

Who do you think should be number one?

Throughout July, we are revealing the top 50 men and women who have put Glasgow on the map through politics, the arts, business, science, sport and more.

Once all 50 have been revealed, it’s over to you – we will be launching a public vote to find out who you think should be crowned Greatest Glaswegian.

Today, we reveal the next two contenders for the title – pioneering lawyer Madge Easton Anderson and awardwinning artist Hannah Frank.

Madge Easton Anderson overcame discrimination to become the first female lawyer, not just in Scotland but in the UK,. She was also a partner in the first UK law firm to be run only by women.

Born in Glasgow in 1896, she grew up in Pollokshields and was educated at Hutcheson’s Grammar School and Glasgow University.

She began her working life as an apprentice law agent at Maclay Murray & Spens in 1917, at a time when it would not have been possible for her to qualify as a lawyer. It was only after the Sex Disqualification (Removal) Act of 1919 that women could become lawyers for the first time.

In December 1920, she became the first woman in the United Kingdom to qualify as a solicitor. Through the university’s settlement organisation, she also volunteered her time to offer free legal advice to those in the Anderston community of Glasgow. Records show that she acted as a ‘Poor Man’s Lawyer’ from 1920-1930.

Hannah Frank, who died in 2008 aged 100, was the city’s last living link to Art Nouveau.

READ MORE: City’s first female Lord Provost and tea tycoon... our greatest Glaswegians

The artist and sculptor overcame bigotry and prejudice growing up in the Gorbals, where she suffered from the sexism which dictated Jewish girls should not be given higher education.

Her father was a Russian émigré, who fled persecution to settle in Glasgow in 1905. He encouraged his daughter to study and to take up art, and she worked hard to overcome stereotypes and persecution to win a place at Glasgow School of Art.

Her elegant pen-and-ink drawings, done between the 1920s and the 1940s, and her sculptures, dating from the 1950s to the early 2000s, are now exhibited all over the world and Hannah Frank is considered one of Scotland’s most significant artists.

READ MORE: Maggie Bell and Charles Rennie Mackintosh in running to be greatest Glaswegian

Don’t miss tomorrow’s Evening Times, when another duo in the running will be revealed. You can catch up on all those on the shortlist so far at eveningtimes.co.uk