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Maybanke
Anderson 1845 - 1927 feminist
Maybanke
Susannah Anderson (1845-1927), feminist reformer, was born at Kingston-on-Thames,
England, on 16 February 1845, one of three children of Bessie (born
Smith) and Henry Selfe, plumber. In 1854 they sailed on the Bangalore
to Sydney where they lived in the Rocks district. While her brothers
Norman and Henry were apprenticed to engineer P. N. Russell and
Maybanke trained as a teacher, their father left them. In 1867 at
St Philip's church, Sydney, Maybanke married Edmund Kay Wolstenholme,
timber merchant. They lived in Maitland until after the birth of
their first child, then in Sydney at Balmain and later at Dulwich
Hill. Of the seven children born, four died of tuberculosis- related
diseases in infancy. Edmund became a drunkard and in 1885 deserted
his family. Maybanke took boarders, and then opened Maybanke College
for young ladies. In 1893, under recent legislation extending grounds
for divorce to include desertion, she secured a divorce.
She had joined the Women's Literary Society in 1890 and the Womanhood
Suffrage League in 1891, serving as president from 1893-97. She
spoke from personal experience of the importance of legal equality
for women. Like others in the suffrage movement she wished the age
of consent to be raised and was critical of moral double standards:
'It is possible for a man to lead the vilest of lives and still
be considered worthy of recognition, while a woman who led a similar
life was shunned'. In the Woman's Voice, the feminist fortnightly
which she started in 1894, she wrote of contraception: 'Motherhood,
the crowning glory of a woman, has been long enough a matter of
accident . . . it is utterly wicked to talk of indelicacy'. She
was a good 'platform woman', though at the beginning of the suffrage
campaign she confided to Rose Scott (q.v.): 'When I stand up all
the old wild horse spirit surges up on me and though I tremble I
feel as if I were ready to fight like a lioness. But we shall win
more by being soft.'
The Woman's Voice was remarkable for its uncompromising honesty,
intellectual quality and absence of racial bias. It caused her considerable
emotional and financial strain and she thought she lost students
because of it. After her son Arthur was drowned in August 1895 Mrs
Wolstenholme suffered some months of ill health, and when Margaret
Windeyer declined her invitation to take over the Woman's Voice
she ceased publication.
When she attended the preliminary meeting of the National Council
of Women in 1895 Mrs Wolstenholme was an office-holder for the Sydney
University Women's Society, the Suffrage League, the Kindergarten
Union of New South Wales and the Australasian Home Reading Union.
Maybanke found theosophy philosophically attractive in its opposition
to war and freedom from sexual and racial bias. She was interested
in education at all levels. The kindergarten and playground movements
were to become her major interests. She was foundation president
of the Kindergarten Union which opened it first free kindergarten
in 1896. 'Formation not reformation' was her aim: better to train
the child than to 'pay an army of policemen, magistrates, etc to
protect us from them'.
Maybanke was appointed first registrar of the Teachers' Central
Registry in 1897 and she resigned from that position to marry Francis
Anderson, philosophy professor at the University of Sydney, in March
1899. He was a leading exponent of educational reform and Maybanke
shared this interest. They honeymooned in Europe and Maybanke, writing
as 'Lois', began contributing to the Sydney Morning Herald
covering topics from travel to politics and jumble sales. She published
Australian Songs for Australian Children in 1902. Following
a second overseas trip in 1909 she became foundation president of
the Playgrounds Association, which pioneered safe, supervised playgrounds
for inner city children. She wrote Play and Playgrounds (1914)
to publicise this cause. During the 1914-18 war Mrs Anderson was
concerned about the spread of venereal diseases but uneasy about
the proposals for compulsory notification. Believing education was
preferable she published The Root of the Matter: Social and Economic
Aspects of the Sex Problem (1916). She offered parents sensible
practical advice on child-rearing in Mother Lore (1919),
which was several times reprinted. Continuing her long association
with the National Council of Women she secured its sponsorship of
a Film Betterment League in 1922 (later Better Film League). Though
troubled about the undesirable influence of the cinema, her interest
lay more in the educational value of good films and in promoting
Australian films.
Mrs Anderson wrote the chapter on 'Women in Australia' in Meredith
Atkinson's influential Australia: Economic and Political Studies
(1920), and local histories of Pittwater and Hunter's Hill. While
on a third overseas trip, she died on 15 April 1927 at St Germain-en-Laye,
Paris.
Jan Roberts
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