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Brettena
Smyth 1840 - 1898 birth control advocate
Bridgetena
Smyth (1842-1898), campaigner for women's health reform and for
women's political rights, was born at Kyneton, Victoria, second
daughter of Bridgetena (born Cavanagh) and John Riordan, a small
merchant. She was named after her mother but always known as Brettena.
In 1861 she married William Taylor Smyth, a storekeeper, who died
in 1873 of phthisis. Brettena supported her children by changing
the little greengrocery and confectionery shop which William had
started in North Melbourne into a drapery and druggist's business.
She had borne five children of whom four were living when she was
widowed; only two sons would survive her.
Brettena was 43 when she first became involved in political activity;
from then until her death she was prominent in progressive causes.
She was an active member of the first Australian suffrage organisation,
the Victorian Women's Suffrage Society (founded in 1884), and formed
a breakaway group, the Australian Women's Suffrage Society (1888).
This group lingered on until the mid 1890s but was eclipsed by the
Victorian Women's Franchise League, an organisation with strong
temperance connections, and the United Council for Women's Suffrage.
Like many of the earliest group of women suffragists, Brettena Smyth
was also a freethinker, opposed to orthodox religion and therefore
somewhat disposed to question other institutions and forms of authority.
Her work was supported by the controversial Australasian Secular
Association. Birth control, however, was an issue which divided
even the radicals. Some saw it as interference with nature; some
as encouraging, instead of curbing, irresponsible male sexuality,
and dragging women's sexuality down to a similar level; some as
another stratagem to weaken further the working classes.
Women suffrage organisations worldwide shied away from public identification
with such a contentious cause. Smyth recognised the liberating potential
of birth control for women, commenting in The Limitation of Offspring
(1893) on a dozen contraceptive techniques, and promoting her rubber
'French Pessaire Preventatif' sold at her shop as 'the only article
of the kind that can be used without the knowledge of the husband'.
But although she was publicly sympathetic to the plight of those
forced into prostitution, and lobbied for reduced gaol sentences
for women desperate enough to kill their illegitimate children,
she was no champion of sex outside marriage. As did many women activists
of that era, she saw a new kind of family and an enhanced role for
motherhood at the heart of social reform.
In her lectures and pamphlets, she argued that well-matched couples
could form a more equal partnership. Biology could lead to a new
destiny. Planned families would mean fewer children, of stronger
stock, without women being weakened by constant child-bearing and
the psychological and financial strains of unwilling motherhood.
Such eugenic arguments about 'the improvement of the race', drawing
on new understandings of the role of genetics in stockbreeding,
were not unfamiliar around the turn of the century. This was especially
true in America, from which Smyth drew many of her health reform
ideas and much of the material she used in well-advertised publications
such as Love, Courtship and Marriage, The Social Evil, Stirpiculture
and The Limitation of Offspring.
Self-taught but widely read, and interested in fringe paramedical
practices such as electrotherapy and phrenology, she dreamed of
studying medicine at the University of Melbourne (a course opened
to women in 1887), but savings intended for fees vanished in the
financial crashes of the 1890s. Her book The Diseases of Women
(1894), though somewhat unpolished and derivative, was aimed at
helping the average women towards a better understanding and control
of her body. Such information was not readily accessible.
Brettena Smyth enjoyed public speaking, and her tall, commanding
presence impressed audiences. She became a well-known and respected
Melbourne identity of the 1890s, and was much mourned at her death,
especially in labour circles. She died on 15 February 1898 and was
buried in the Melbourne General Cemetery, according to Roman Catholic
rites - an ironic end, given her history of support for secularism
and birth control.
Farley Kelly
Rebels and Radicals edited by Eric Fry 1983 ch 9.
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