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Mary
Colton 1822 - 1898 philanthropist
Annie
Mary Colton (1822-1898), philanthropist and suffragist, was born
in London on 6 December 1822, daughter of Hannah and Samuel Cutting.
In 1839 she accompanied her widowed father to Adelaide; in December
1844 she married John Blackler Colton, owner of a prospering saddlery
and hardware business. They lived at Hackney on 2 ha adjacent to
Adelaide. Between 1848 and 1865 Mary bore nine children; several
died in infancy.
A Wesleyan Methodist, she practised her faith unwaveringly, helping
many in need, including 'shoals' who came to her door. 'Genial,
pleasant, sunshiny', she was a devoted Sunday school teacher to
generations of girls at the Gawler Place and later the Pirie St
Wesleyan Methodist churches. Concerned for the welfare of women
and children, she founded the Pirie St Dorcas Society, was vice-president
of the Nursing Sisters' Association and treasurer of the Maternity
Relief Association which assisted poor city mothers.
Ample domestic assistance enabled her to manage her elegant home
and entertain generously; her husband was Adelaide's mayor (1874-75),
a Member of Parliament (1862-87) and twice Premier. Mary worked
with him in the Benevolent and Strangers' Friend Society and in
organisations for the blind, deaf and dumb. All her life a city-dweller,
she understood the situation of the poor and unprotected, and worked
to house elderly women when she joined a cottage homes committee
in 1871; later she was on the Lady Kintore Cottage Homes Trust,
and the Home for Incurables committee. She assumed her many responsibilities
without fuss. Never a figurehead but an assiduous worker, she shunned
personal publicity.
In 1879, seeing problems which faced country girls in her large
Sunday school class, she began a city club for young women; it was
one of her dearest ventures. She also helped run a separate residential
club for working girls from 1881. It lapsed, but through Mary's
patient work her city club expanded, rented rooms, and in l884 became
the South Australian Young Women's Christian Association, of which
she remained president until her death. Under her care its social,
educational and evangelistic departments flourished.
Aware of child illness and of the plight of unwanted children, she
became one of the founders of the Adelaide Children's Hospital,
opened in 1876, and worked on the Boarding-Out Society which placed
orphaned and neglected children in selected private homes instead
of state institutions. She continued similar tasks on the new State
Children's Council from 1886.
Mary Colton's connection with the suffrage arose from her membership,
from 1867, of the ladies' committee of the Female Refuge where she
gained insight into the problems of single mothers and women seeking
to escape from prostitution. Mary's husband, attempting legislation
to protect young people, was president of the Social Purity Society
which encouraged the Refuge ladies' committee to begin a Society
branch in 1883. As its treasurer, Mary worked with forceful secretary
Mary Lee (q.v.) to implement Social Purity aims. The age of consent
was raised to sixteen in 1885, but seeking further improvements,
Mary Colton and her colleagues began to recognise the urgent need
for women's suffrage. Soon after Mary and her husband had sailed
for a second and extended visit abroad, Social Purity Society members
organised the South Australian Women's Suffrage League, in July
1888.
In 1892 her husband was appointed KCMG and in May of that year Lady
Colton became Women's Suffrage League president. Using her knowledge
of politics and politicians, her insight into women's inadequate
social status and her customary friendly tact, she worked in harmony
with Mary Lee. Their qualities and skills were complementary. Though
she seldom made speeches, she acknowledged publicly and succinctly
her commitment to women's suffrage. As a member of the Woman's Christian
Temperance Union she facilitated the League's cooperation with the
Union and thereby strengthened the suffrage campaign. She took on
the additional post in 1893 of foundation president of the Women's
Auxiliary of Foreign Missions.
After a campaign marked by extensive debate, strong opposition,
and sustained and skilful League effort, women's suffrage legislation
on terms equal to men's was passed in December 1894, to widespread
public acclaim. Mary Colton and her husband had recently celebrated
50 years of marriage. She continued her round of work, ignoring
fierce summer heat in 1897-98; her health suffered and she died
on 28 July 1898. Her extraordinary range of work had helped shape
South Australian institutions and improve women's status. Her name
was given to the Lady Colton hall in the YWCA building and to Colton
ward at the Adelaide Children's Hospital.
Helen Jones
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