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Emma
Miller 1839 - 1917 labour activist
Louisa
Emma Miller (1839-1917), labour activist and feminist, was born
on 26 June 1839 at Chesterfield, England, eldest of four children
of Martha (born Hollingworth) and Daniel Holmes, cordwainer. Of
a Chartist family, she never forgot the early lessons which influenced
her to live and die a rebel. Throughout her life she followed a
creed learnt from the writings of Tom Paine: 'The world is my country;
to do good is my religion'. She eloped with Jabez Silcock in 1857
and they had four children, whom she supported after his death by
sewing 70 hours a week. In 1874 she married William Calderwood and
in 1879 they migrated to Brisbane; William died the following year.
Her third husband Andrew Miller, whom she married in Brisbane in
1886, died in 1897.
Emma was prominent in the women's movement, involved in the formation
of a women's union in 1890, pushing for equal pay and votes for
women. She was tireless in agitation and propaganda work for labour,
a behind- the-scenes power for adherence to principle. The first
woman member and life member of the Brisbane Workers' Political
Organisation, she stressed the labour movement was as important
for women as for men. She gave evidence, as a shirtmaker, to the
1891 royal commission into shops, factories and workshops, exposing
the 'sweaters' and their exploitation of women workers. She believed
that where conscience was satisfied, unpopularity should not matter:
respectability meant acting in humanity's interests.
Emma, as foundation president of the Woman's Equal Franchise Association
from 1894 to 1905, campaigned vigorously for the female franchise
on the basis of one woman one vote. At the time the labour movement
was fighting to abolish plural property votes. After repeated petitions,
deputations and meetings the vote in State elections was won in
1905. The Worker paid tribute to Emma for her years of trusted
and tireless leadership: her energy and enthusiasm 'would put women
half her years to the blush . . . Wherever Progress has needed a
faithful worker or an earnest voice she has been there every time.
In doing honour to her the women of Queensland would do honour to
themselves'.
With the first federal vote for women due in 1903, the Women Workers'
Political Organisation was formed, with Emma as president, to capture
the women's vote for Labour. Speaking at an election meeting, she
declared, at the age of 65, 'I am only beginning to live'. On Black
Friday, 2 February 1912, during the general strike, she led a contingent
of women to Parliament House avoiding police with fixed bayonets;
but on their return being charged by baton swinging police. Emma
reputedly dug her hatpin into the horse of Police Commissioner Cahill,
who was thrown and permanently injured; her family maintains she
dug the hatpin into Cahill himself. The courage and spirit of this
frail, old woman endeared her to people. She was proud to be called
Mother Miller and the Grand Old Woman of Queensland Labour.
An internationalist and anti-militarist, Mrs Miller opposed the
1914-18 war, saying 'those who make the quarrel should be the only
ones to fight'. She fought for free speech, civil liberties and
against conscription. She preached equal pay to those who feared
women taking conscripts' jobs at low rates. As vice-president of
the Women's Peace Army, she was a delegate to the Peace Alliance
Conference, Melbourne, 1916, and spoke at a rowdy Yarra bank meeting.
When Emma died in Toowoomba on 22 January 1917, the flag at the
Trades Hall in Brisbane flew at half mast, the meatworkers' union
conference was adjourned and progressive papers carried glowing
tributes. A publicly funded bust was unveiled at the Trades Hall
on 22 October 1922.
Pam Young
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