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Louisa
Lawson 1848 - 1920 newspaper proprietor
Louisa
Lawson (1848-1920), newspaper proprietor, was born on 17 February
1848 on 'Guntawang' station, near Mudgee, New South Wales, second
of twelve children of Harriet (born Winn) and Harry Albury, station
hand. She was educated at the Mudgee national school. Kept home
to help care for her younger siblings, she resented the drudgery.
On 7 July l866 she married Niels Hertzberg Larsen (Peter Lawson).
They joined the Weddin Mountain gold rush and he later took up a
16 ha selection at Eurunderee, near Mudgee.
Between 1867 and 1877 Louisa bore five children, one of whom died
in infancy. Peter was often away from home, at a goldrush or on
contract work. Louisa sold dairy produce, fattened cattle, opened
a store and ran a post office. Drought forced them off the selection
in 1883; Louisa moved to Sydney with her younger children and kept
up a pretence of being separated from her husband by misfortune,
but the marriage had ended. He sent money irregularly to help support
the children; she did washing and sewing and took in boarders.
Reared a strict Methodist and deeply religious throughout life,
Louisa investigated spiritualism and found friends through the Progressive
Spiritualist Lyceum at Leigh House, Sydney. In 1887-88 with her
son Henry, later famous for his poetry and short stories, she edited
the Republican. In 1888 she started Dawn, announcing
that it would publicise women's wrongs, fight their battles and
sue for their suffrage. It offered a mix of service features - household
hints and patterns - along with literary items and news. It was
a commercial success. When Peter died in December 1888, leaving
1103 pounds to Louisa, she enlarged her printing plant and accepted
job printing.
In 1889 the Typographical Association, which refused membership
to women, tried to drive Mrs Lawson out of business. Her printers,
women who had learnt the trade outside Australia, were harassed
on their way to work by male printers, who from outside the building
used mirrors to flash light into the women's eyes as they worked.
In May 1889 Louisa announced the formation of a Dawn Club for women,
which became a suffrage society. She encouraged women to become
practised public speakers, having persuaded the Sydney School of
Arts debating club to admit women; in 1893 she was elected to its
board of management. Through Dawn she created a public knowledge
of women's affairs which helped move opinion towards their enfranchisement.
In editorials she presented feminist arguments for opening the legal
profession to women, for appointing women as prison warders, factory
inspectors and magistrates, and allowing hospital appointments to
women doctors. She blamed prostitution on men and evil laws, and
urged parents to equip their daughters to earn a living and not
keep them home as unpaid domestic labour. She featured instances
where the law failed to protect women.
Mrs Lawson was also a practical philanthropist, organising collections
of seeds and bulbs for the Ragged Schools and regularly attending
prize-givings. She supported crèches as a means of providing relief
for overworked mothers.
When the Womanhood Suffrage League was formed in 1891, Mrs Lawson
joined its Council, allowed it the use of Dawn offices and
printed its literature free of charge. She spoke frequently at League
meetings, was a member of the League's deputation to the Premier
in 1892, and was widely reported for saying women must have the
vote 'to redeem the world from bad laws passed by wicked men'. She
was drawn into the dispute on which her friend Lady Windeyer (q.v.)
resigned as president, and resigned from the council though she
continued to publicise the cause: 'our space is too limited to waste
one line in anything but praise and encouragement for women'.
In 1900 Louisa was thrown from a tram, injuring her knee and spine,
and was bedridden for many months. She had invented and patented
a buckle for fastening mailbags which she had been supplying in
small quantities to the post office, but in 1900 a conspiracy formed
to deprive her of the benefits of her invention. She was subsequently
awarded compensation, but the amount was reduced on appeal to 60
pounds.
After 1901 Dawn lost some of its earlier vitality and inventiveness.
Novelties disappeared and there were fewer lively short news items
reporting women's activities. Advertising fell away and in l905
Dawn closed. Louisa had remained politically active; she
joined the council of the Women's Progressive Association and continued
campaigning for the appointment of women to public office. She was
increasingly troubled by family matters. Earlier in Henry's writing
career, she had given advice and encouragement and arranged the
publication of his first volume of poetry, but the two became estranged:
he was an alcoholic repeatedly gaoled for failing to pay maintenance
for his children. Her other sons suffered mental breakdowns and
she and her daughter quarrelled.
She retired to her cottage in Marrickville and supported herself
as a freelance writer, mainly with short stories which appeared
in the Sydney Mail, the Evening News, the Worker
and Woman's Budget. Her poems, published as The Lonely
Crossing (1906), have recently been re- evaluated: her poem
'To a Libertine' is 'a tense, psychologically subtle evocation of
a woman destroyed because true innocence in a world of men is simply
vulnerability'; her voice was 'unequivocally a feminine one'.
In impoverished circumstances, she tended her garden, living near
her son Peter and his family; another son sometimes stayed with
her. Her Dolly Dear poems capture the humour and warmth of an old
woman's love for children:
Oh Dolly dear won't it be drand
Two biftdays - just fink! - two!
For Dramma's four years old to day
And I am eighty-two.
In most surviving photographs Louisa appears stern faced. Big-boned,
as befitted a country-woman, she told the editor of the Bulletin's
'Red Page': 'And why shouldn't a woman be tall and strong?' She
died in Gladesville Hospital for the Insane on 12 August 1920.
Heather Radi
Brian Matthews Louisa 1987.
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