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Eliza
Pottie (1836-1907), evangelist and social reformer, was born in
1836 at Belfast, Ireland, only daughter of four children of Ruth
Johnston (born Sayers) and William Bell Allen. About 1842 they came
to Sydney, where her father established a soap and candle works
and in 1860 was elected to the New South Wales Legislative Assembly.
The family were Quakers. On 13 March 1862 Eliza married John Pottie,
veterinary surgeon. They had six children.
Eliza had her husband's support in her numerous religious and philanthropic
causes. She was a founder, and for 31 years a member of the committee
of the Sydney Female Mission Home, a refuge for unmarried mothers,
a committee member of the Home of Hope, for destitute women, and
(Lisgar) Servants' Training Home, an orphanage for girls, and member
of the ladies committee of the Society for the Relief of Destitute
Children which ran Randwick Asylum. She took children from Mrs Jefferis'
cottage home to stay with her for a holiday. She regularly visited
women in public hospitals, in gaol, the asylum for the aged and
La Perouse Aboriginal Reserve. In 1886 she was appointed to the
Government Asylums Inquiry Board ladies' committee. Her detailed,
passionate and forthright evidence of starvation, neglect and brutality
at Newington Asylum was reflected in the majority report, leading
to improved management. Mrs Pottie became one of Sydney's leading
evangelicals, a founding vice-president of the ladies' committee
of Sydney City Mission (1887), an office-bearer of Sydney Ladies'
United Evangelical Association, secretary to its Bible and Prayer
Union and active in its Flower Mission. She was on the committee
of the Sydney Women's Prayer Union and the ladies' committee of
the Social Purity Society.
Her denunciation of the Queensland Contagious Diseases Act in a
letter to the Brisbane Courier in 1884 sparked a fierce controversy.
Women were being forced to submit to a 'brutal' and degrading examination
(for venereal disease) in order that 'men, bad men, . . . may be
protected'. Pottie was a prolific letter-writer. In the Sydney
Morning Herald for the 1888 centenary, she called for an amnesty
for deserving prisoners and prohibition on manacling in gaols. She
also wrote poetry.
She was a passionate advocate of total abstinence. Her multiple
causes were also those of the Woman's Christian Temperance Union,
of which she was a founding member (1882), a vice-president and
colonial superintendent of its peace and arbitration department.
She fought against the prevailing militarism: 'We women do not believe
in (war . . . we) have received from the Lord a word on this matter
and we mean to publish it.' In 1890 she became president of the
WCTU sponsored (Women's) Franchise League, but on realising some
supporters of women's suffrage would not work under WCTU auspices
she resigned and the League folded. She joined but resigned in 1892
from the council of the Womanhood Suffrage League. She represented
the WCTU at the foundation of the National Council of Women in 1896.
As an executive member of the Ladies' Sanitary Association from
1889 and president from 1892 to 1900, Eliza Pottie worked to improve
standards of public hygiene. She also supported a reduction in the
working hours of female shop assistants. On the committee of the
YWCA she was further involved in the welfare of young women. During
the 1890s depression she was on the Quaker Relief Committee. She
practised charity and evangelism on an individual basis giving parcels
of food to poor families and religious tracts with lollies to children.
Eliza Pottie was a passionately energetic public force for women's
causes; a 'clear, logical speaker and debater'; her 'pen and voice
were always ready . . . (in the) cause of peace, temperance and
purity'. She died after a long illness on 14 November 1907.
Judith Godden
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