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Catherine
Spence 1825 - 1910 social reformer
Annie
Catherine Helen Spence (1825-1910) was proclaimed on her eightieth
birthday 'the most distinguished woman they had had in Australia'.
She responded, 'I am a new woman, and I know it. I mean an awakened
woman . . . awakened to a sense of capacity and responsibility,
not merely to the family and the household, but to the State; to
be wise, not for her own selfish interests, but that the world may
be glad that she had been born'. This new woman was a novelist,
journalist, preacher, public campaigner for social and political
reform, suffragist and feminist.
Born 31 October 1825 near Melrose, Scotland, the fifth of eight
children of Helen (born Brodie) and David Spence, lawyer and banker,
she completed her formal schooling in Melrose. Plans for her to
attend an advanced school for girls in Edinburgh failed when financial
collapse compelled the family to emigrate, to South Australia, in
1839.
Religious despair about the doctrine of predestination, together
with satisfaction at her first earnings from governessing, decided
Spence against marriage and motherhood, though she was to bring
up three families of other people's children in the course of her
life. After a brief attempt to set up a school, she embarked on
her first career as a novelist. Clara Morison (1854) was
the first novel set in Australia to be written by a woman. She followed
it with Tender and True (1856), Mr. Hogarth's Will
(1865), and The Author's Daughter (1868). Gathered In,
serialised in the Adelaide Observer 1881-82, was not published
as a book until 1897. Handfasted, submitted for a prize offered
by the Sydney Mail in about 1880, but rejected as 'calculated
to loosen the marriage tie . . . too socialistic and therefore dangerous',
was finally published in 1984. Her last major fiction was the religious
allegory An Agnostic's Progress from the Known to the Unknown
(1884) and the future-vision novella A Week in the Future
(1889). A century later, her fiction is gaining new attention: Clara
Morison has appeared in three new editions since 1971. Her religious
doubts banished by conversion to Unitarianism, her literary reputation
well-established, at least in South Australia, in the 1860s, Spence
embarked upon a multi-faceted second career. One facet was the Boarding-Out
Society, formed by Caroline Emily Clark in 1872, to select children
from the government industrial school, board them with families,
and visit them regularly to check on their welfare. Spence's work
with Clark in this undertaking led to her appointment to the new
State Children's Council in 1887, and to the government Destitute
Board in 1897. Another facet developed from her continuing engagement
with educational questions. She had a brief stint as member of a
school board for East Torrens. She argued strongly for the establishment
of the state Advanced School for Girls, opened in 1879. She composed,
at the invitation of the government's new Education Department,
The Laws We Live Under (1880), the first social studies textbook
used in Australian schools, which anticipated similar courses in
other colonies by 20 years. A third facet was her journalism. In
1878, after 30 years of having her articles appear in journals or
the press anonymously or under a pen-name, Spence was appointed
to the daily South Australian Register as 'a regular outside
contributor'. This appointment, over which she was jubilant, gave
her the confidence to put her name to the articles she wrote. They
ranged widely, across literary, social and economic issues; they
offer the historian a chart of her political development from conservative
concern at the effects of manhood suffrage to a liberal commitment
to the rights of minorities; they provided her with space in which
to promote her favourite causes.
The cause which she considered primary was electoral reform through
the introduction of proportional representation or, as she called
it, 'effective voting'. This cause took her into a third career
as a public speaker. Spence began this career in 1871 when the South
Australian Institute asked her for a lecture. She refused the convention
by which she would write the lecture which would then be presented
by a man, and instead read it herself, saying she wanted 'to make
(it) easier henceforward for any woman who felt she had something
to say to stand up and say it'. Subsequently invited to preach in
the Unitarian pulpit, Spence had become an accomplished speaker
by the 1890s. In 1892 she launched a campaign for 'effective voting'
on public platforms throughout South Australia, in Melbourne, Sydney,
and (in 1893) across the United States. This cause preoccupied her
for the remainder of her life. In promoting it she stood for election
to the Federal Convention of 1897, thus becoming Australia's first
female political candidate.
At the same time she worked strenuously to improve the position
of women. Vice-president of the Women's Suffrage League from 1891
until the vote was won in 1894 in South Australia, the first colony
to grant female suffrage, she publicised the struggle in the United
States and Britain, speaking to women's clubs and establishing contacts
with Charlotte Perkins Gilman, Susan B. Anthony, Jane Addams and
Millicent Garrett Fawcett. She provided active support to the Sydney
suffragist Rose Scott (q.v.), the Melbourne suffragist Vida Goldstein
(q.v.), and the feminist journalist Alice Henry. She attempted to
form a South Australian branch of the International Council of Women.
From 1901 until her death she chaired the management board of the
Co-operative Clothing Company, a shirt-making factory owned and
run exclusively by women, in which the workers as well as the owners
held shares. In 1909, the year before she died, she chaired the
meeting which formed the Women's Non-Party Political Association.
She was mourned on her death as 'The Grand Old Woman of Australia'.
In 1986 a statue was placed in her memory in Light Square, Adelaide.
Susan Magarey
Susan Magarey Unbridling the Tongues of Women: a Biography of
Catherine Helen Spence 1985.
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