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Eliza
Martha Webster (1839-1915), preacher and suffrage campaigner, was
born in London, daughter of Caroline (born Gyles) and William Turner,
a tailor. She was educated for three years at a high school at Dijon,
France, where she 'early developed high intellectual qualities'.
She arrived in Melbourne in October 1870 to visit her brother Henry
Gyles Turner, general manager in Melbourne for the Commercial Bank
of Australia and historian and littérateur. He was a leading member
of the Melbourne Unitarian church, though a reluctant preacher,
and Martha 'came to (his) assistance'. On 26 October 1873 at a special
meeting of the congregation Martha was elected a regular minister.
At her inauguration she read the lesson from I Corinthians XIV and
addressed the text 'Let your women keep silent in Church', emphasising
individual responsibility to inward consciousness: 'It seemed to
me at first not quite in accordance with the fitness of things that
Unitarianism, which represents an essentially masculine order of
thought, should be represented by a woman. At the same time, a woman
represents the laity more completely than a man could do. Unitarianism
has always upheld the rights of the laity in the Church'. In a good-humoured
response to criticism she observed it was 'somewhat inconsistent'
for a man who came to hear a woman preach then to complain she was
not a man. She was reported to be 'fluent, if not eloquent', 'very
elevated' and 'poetic'. Three of her sermons were published. Martha
married John Webster, a bank officer, on 22 August 1878 at the office
of the Registrar-General, Melbourne. She resigned her pastorate
but was persuaded to continue until her successor arrived from London;
when he resigned after three months she returned as minister, retiring
in 1883.
In May 1884 Mrs Webster was present at the meeting which resolved
to form the Victorian Women's Suffrage Society. She initially supported
a property qualification but for expediency only; it was a minority
point of view which she abandoned. From 1885-87 she was in Britain
with her husband and there preached in London, Birmingham and Scottish
cities. On their return they lived at Boolarra, Gippsland, but Martha
came often to Melbourne to stay with her brother who entertained
lavishly at St Kilda. She was active in the Australian Women's Suffrage
Society, using the arguments of no taxation without representation
(1888) and 'national housekeeping' (1895) - 'men who have muddled
the finances have the vote, and the women who have helped to meet
the liabilities have not'.
From October 1914, requiring medical treatment, she lived in Melbourne.
She died at St Kilda on 11 August 1915. The Woman Voter described
her as 'intellectual, simple in tastes, a good conversationalist,
decidedly humorous and sarcastic but withal kindly'.
Farley Kelly and Heather Radi
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