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Jessie
Rooke 1845 - 1906 temperance advocate
Jessie
Spinks Rooke (1845-l906), Christian temperance reformer, was born
at Emu, in north-western Tasmania, daughter of Sophia (born Francis)
and John Spinks, shepherd with the Van Diemen's Land Company. She
moved to the mainland and married Charles Rooke, medical practitioner.
While resident in Sydney she became involved in the British Women's
Bible and Prayer Union, emerging as one of its principal leaders.
Much later she joined the Marrickville Woman's Christian Temperance
Union. During the 1890s depression, the Rookes moved to Burnie,
Tasmania, where, despite poor health, Jessie began her meteoric
rise in the WCTU. She re-formed the moribund Burnie Union, becoming
president in 1894, and progressed through the correspondence, press
work and plan of work and resolutions committees to the position
of Tasmanian president in 1898 and Australasian president in 1903.
In that year the Tasmanian franchise was extended to women.
Mrs Rooke was convinced of the importance of women's suffrage as
a prerequisite for temperance and social reform. She was instrumental
in the establishment and development of the Tasmanian Women's Suffrage
League, which aimed to inform women about their right to vote in
federal elections, to educate women 'on the question of voting'
and how their vote might be 'a power for good'. She had great faith
in education and information as tools for gaining popular support
for WCTU causes.
She combined physical frailty with a great strength of will and
determination. Obituaries refer to her talent for settling conflicts
and differences of opinion. She had the knack of making her sisters
appreciate the importance of her work 'in aiding the advancement
of righteousness', as well as having them 'comply' with her 'suggestions'.
Competent, articulate, intelligent and confident, she transformed
herself from the daughter of a shepherd earning 30 pounds a year
into a 'well-born Scotch woman' with a 'refinement of grace of manner'.
Mrs Blair, who was pushed out of the Tasmanian presidency in favour
of Mrs Rooke, described her as 'alert to seize every opportunity
and enter every open door'. All her achievements were restricted
by her belief that 'woman was destined by God to be the help meet
of man'; improving women and their place in society was only to
make them better able to fulfil their natural role as wives and
mothers. She believed in the innate purity and maternal destiny
of women.
She died on 4 January l906 survived by her sons and three grandchildren.
No personal papers survive. It is rumoured they were burnt by her
husband shortly after her death.
Sonya Thompson
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