Anna Moody (24 May 1881 – 20 March 1950) was a Girl Guide Association (GGA) executive in Northern Ireland. She received the Silver Fish Award, Girl Guiding's highest adult honour. She was a committee member of the Limavady Women's Unionist Association for 20 years and community organiser. Personal life and education. Moody was born in Limavady, County Londonderry. She was the daughter of Robert Andrew Robertson, an iron founder from Glasgow and Elizabeth Robertson, née Ritter, from Limavady. She had seven sisters, including Dr Muriel Robertson, a founding member of the Society for Microbiology, and four brothers. She married George Goldney Moody (1866-1962), a district commissioner for the Boy Scouts, in 1903. They moved to South Africa in 1903 to farm, returning to Ireland in 1920. By 1935 they were living in Ballymaglin, County Londonderry. Girl Guides. Moody joined the Girl Guides in 1921 as captain of 1st Roeside Guide company. She attended the first World Camp) in 1924 as the Ulster representative. In 1933 she, as the Londonderry County commissioner for Girl Guides, and her husband, the district commissioner of the local Boy Scouts, were instrumental in the building of the Limavady Girl Guides' and Boy Scouts' Hall. She was Girl Guiding's Ulster commissioner for camping in 1933. Between 1934 and 1937 she was Imperial commissioner for camping, in which role she organised an international camp at Dunmurry. She also held an "important position" at the Coronation Camp in Essex in 1937. Between 1938 and 1944 she served as deputy chief commissioner for Ulster Girl Guides. After she resigned, because of ill health, she received the Silver Fish Award, presented by Rosalind Hamilton, Duchess of Abercorn. In the 1940s she played the following roles for Girl Guides: Other community work. Moody was heavily involved in the Limavady Women's Unionist Association between 1927 and 1947 as hon. secretary, hon. treasurer and vice president. Between 1930 and 1944 she was a committee member of Limavady District Nursing and Child Welfare Association. During WWII she was the chief organiser of the Londonderry County scrap metal and salvage campaign. Other organisations she was affiliated with were: