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Mary
Lee 1821 - 1909 suffragist
Mary
Lee (1821-1909), suffragist, was born on 14 February 1821 in Monaghan,
Ireland, daughter of John Walsh and his wife. In 1844 she married
George Lee, organist and vicar-choral of Armagh Cathedral; they
had seven children. In 1879 Mary, widowed, sailed with her daughter
to Adelaide to nurse her sick son who died a year later. The two
women remained, Mary becoming devoted to 'dear Adelaide', which
she could not in any case afford to leave.
For the rest of her life Mary Lee, 'once the slip of an old red-hot
Tory stem', worked single-mindedly for political and social reform.
Her qualities of leadership, conviction and perseverance matched
the social and political climate of late nineteenth century South
Australia. She was first interested in Jewish colonisation. In 1883
she became foundation secretary of the ladies' division of the Social
Purity Society, working to improve women's social and sexual status.
The society lobbied strenuously and stimulated public and parliamentary
debate, which resulted in 1885 legislation raising the age of consent
to sixteen. Subsequently secretary of the Adelaide Ladies Social
Purity Society, she continued her work for women and girls, including
street newspaper sellers. The Purity Society soon recognised that
women's suffrage was essential to their improved status and in July
1888 inaugurated the Women's Suffrage League.
As secretary to the League, Mary Lee played a major part in South
Australia's political history. She skilfully directed the campaign
for public acceptance of women's suffrage. Unafraid of controversy,
determined, and sometimes abrasive, she publicised her 'crowning
task': 'If I die before it is achieved, like Mary Tudor and Calais,
'Women's enfranchisement' shall be found engraved upon my heart'.
Steeped in liberal ideology, especially the egalitarian ideas of
J. S. Mill, she used such arguments, embellished by historical,
literary and Biblical allusions, in her speeches, newspaper articles
and letters.
The League's objects were women's enfranchisement on equal terms
with men, without claiming access to parliamentary seats. From 1888-92
Mrs Lee worked with League president Edward Stirling, who in 1885
had first introduced in the South Australian Parliament the resolution
for female suffrage. In 1892 Mary Colton (q.v.), whom Mary Lee 'dearly
loved and deeply honoured', became president; together they directed
their deep belief in social justice towards women's suffrage - 'the
cause of humanity'. Mary Lee emphasised that she was 'not a woman's
rights woman'; her ideology was shaped by her life experiences,
especially among the poor, by her wide reading, and by her Christian
commitment, first to the Anglican church and latterly in South Australia
to the social reformist Primitive Methodists.
In December 1889, at a public meeting on 'sweated' labour, Mary
Lee proposed the formation of trade unions for women; when the Working
Women's Trades Union was founded in the following year she became
its secretary. She visited clothing factories and workshops, persuading
employers to adopt the union's rates. In 1893 she was union vice-
president, and as delegate to the Trades and Labor Council she worked
on a sub-committee examining sweating in the clothing trades, and
on the Distressed Women's and Children's Committee. She was also
a member of the Female Refuge ladies' committee.
Meanwhile, she spoke eloquently at Suffrage League meetings and
socials, at Democratic clubs, and despite a dislike of total abstinence,
at Woman's Christian Temperance Union meetings. When her bare expenses
were paid she travelled to speak in the country. Backed by the League's
council, she planned wider strategies, organised petitions and deputations
and collected shilling membership subscriptions. She corresponded
with women in other colonies advising on the formation of suffrage
leagues. With the backing of the Wesleyan, Baptist and Congregational
churches from 1889, and of the United Labor Party from 1891, public
interest intensified and Mary's confidence increased, although privately
she admitted suffering when criticised. In 1893 she castigated the
Labor Party as 'a lot of nincompoops' for supporting a suffrage
bill encumbered by a referendum condition. After six separate bills
the seventh 1894 bill was unencumbered.
Mary organised a colony-wide suffrage petition which yielded 11,600
signatures. The 120 metre-long roll was presented to Parliament
in August 1894. Women 'deluged' members with telegrams and thronged
the galleries during the debates. On 18 December 1894 the Constitution
Amendment Act was passed; South Australian women were the first
in Australia to gain the parliamentary vote. Additionally, they
gained the right to a postal vote and the right to stand for Parliament.
In 1895 Mrs Lee was invited by two trade unions to stand for Parliament
but declined, preferring to work 'on the side of right . . . unfettered
by pledge or obligation to any party whatever'. Taking a non-party
stand she advised women on their voting rights and duties. In 1896,
on her 75th birthday, the Premier handed her a purse of sovereigns,
publicly donated, and an illuminated address which acknowledged
that women's suffrage 'is mainly due to your persistent advocacy
and unwearied exertions'.
In 1896 the government appointed her first female official visitor
to the lunatic asylums; for twelve years she regularly performed
the task with courage and compassion. Her last years were blighted
by poverty, forcing her to sell her library. There was little response
to a public appeal for her relief, launched by an Adelaide newspaper
and in the Australian Woman's Sphere. She complained to Rose
Scott (q.v.) that her public work had all been at her own expense
and that she was threatened with homelessness. Her 'advanced' views
had not endeared her to many, and her achievements were gradually
forgotten. She died in her rented North Adelaide home on 18 September
1909.
Helen Jones
Helen Jones Nothing Seemed Impossible 1985.
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