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Emily
Dobson 1842 - 1934 philanthropist
Bridgetena
Emily Dobson (1842-1934), philanthropist, was born on 10 October
l842 at Port Arthur, Van Diemen's Land, daughter of Charlotte (born
Smith) and Thomas James Lempriere, public servant, artist and amateur
scientist. She was educated at home. On 4 February 1868 she married
Henry Dobson, lawyer and politician, who was elected Member for
Brighton in the Tasmanian Legislative Assembly in 1891 and was Premier
from 1892-94. There were two sons and three daughters.
The Dobson family wealth and Henry's belief in a society stratified
by money and property gave Emily the leisure and ideological justification
to carry out her numerous welfare projects. Emily did not lead a
life which involved domestic labour. Henry's money ensured the leisure
and resources for 33 trips to Britain and Europe, 67 trips away
from Tasmania, and a full-time secretary to assist her in her numerous
charitable works.
One of Mrs Dobson's earliest public campaigns was in the area of
sanitation. Following an outbreak of typhoid in 1891, she and Lady
Hamilton called a public meeting to protest against 'inactivity
and callousness . . . decimating our home'; she arranged for women
to collect signatures on a petition for a deep drainage sewerage
system. She called further meetings and formed the Women's Sanitary
Association to educate women on sanitary matters and to instigate
house-to-house visits: 'each and all . . . must urge upon our neighbours
the necessity of active personal supervision in all sanitary matters'.
Her efforts were largely ignored by the Hobart City Council which
implied the women were meddlesome alarmists.
Henry Dobson's response as Premier to the 1890s depression was to
close public works, retrench labour and cut wages. His wife organised
a soup kitchen in association with the Benevolent Society and several
church groups, supplying up to 1000 meals a day. The anomaly of
charitable women undertaking work which at home they paid servants
to do attracted press attention. The Tasmanian Mail scoffed
at their efforts: while 'the unemployed want work to buy bread,
Mrs Dobson offers them sop in a soup kitchen'. It feared pauperisation.
Mrs Dobson was a founding president of the Ministering Children's
League (1892), which ran a convalescent home for poor women and
children, and she was involved in the work of the Society for the
Protection of Children. Following a press campaign against 'baby
farmers' (women paid to take care of babies whose mothers had to
work), the Society secured an Infant Life Protection Act (1907).
The Act was similar to interstate legislation which permitted inspection
without notice of homes where infants were being minded for payment.
Whereas the right to enter without notice had been conferred on
the police in other States, in Tasmania the Society for the Protection
of Children was given this policing role.
Mrs Dobson was a founding member of the Tasmanian National Council
of Women in 1899 and president from 1906-34. Modelled on similar
organisations in America and Europe, the National Council was committed
to advancing women's social and legal status and the welfare of
children. In principle it was non-political and non-sectarian. Volunteering
to pay her own expenses, Mrs Dobson represented the Tasmanian Council
at the London conference in 1899 and became a regular attender at
the quinquennial conferences. When the international body put pressure
on the separate State delegations to combine, women from the other
States stood aside for Mrs Dobson, such was the respect in which
she was held by contemporaries. She continued to be accepted as
the leader of the Australian delegation for 20 years.
Among her other causes were free kindergartens, a sanatorium for
consumptives, better treatment for the blind, deaf and dumb, worker
housing, the Bush Nurses, temperance, the League of Nations Union,
the Art Society and Girl Guides. The Tasmanian National Council
of Women honoured her in 1919 by establishing the Emily Dobson Philanthropic
Prize Competition for welfare organisations. Mrs Dobson did not
seek to reform a hierarchical social order but to ameliorate its
effects on those less fortunate than herself. She died in Hobart
on 5 June 1934.
Ruth Barton
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