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Janet
Clarke 1851 - 1909 philanthropist
Janet
Marion Clarke (1851-1909), philanthropist, was born at 'Doogallook'
station, Victoria, on 4 June 1851, eldest daughter of Charlotte
Agnes (born Cotton) and Peter Snodgrass, squatter. He was agent
for a syndicate involved in the bribery of politicians and in financial
difficulties when he died in 1867. Janet became governess to the
children of William Clarke, heir to William Clarke, pastoralist
and landowner. The younger William's wife died in April 1871 and
on 21 January 1873 he married Janet. They had four daughters and
four sons.
On his father's death in 1874, William became the largest landowner
in Victoria and Janet 'uncrowned queen of society'. He built a mansion,
'Rupertswood', on the Sunbury estate and hired Melbourne Town Hall
for a lavish ball during Melbourne Cup week. In 1888 their Melbourne
home, 'Cliveden', designed by William Wardell (architect of St Patrick's
Cathedral), was completed and Janet made this 'small palace of a
house' the centre of Melbourne social life.
Janet was more than a decorative society lady, elegantly and expensively
displaying her husband's wealth and worth. She believed wealth brought
obligations and she was active in management and benefactor to a
wide range of associations. In 1885 she was a founding vice-president
of the District Nursing Society which provided skilled nursing at
home for sick poor women. She was an executive member of the Queen's
Fund, from which financial assistance was available to women left
impoverished by loss of male relatives, and a member of the Charity
Organization Society. She served on committees of the Women's Hospital,
the Hospital for Sick Children, the Talbot Epileptic Society and
the City Newsboys' Society. In 1902 she was foundation president
of the Victorian National Council of Women, which sponsored a hospital
for infectious diseases. Janet resigned (though she later rejoined)
the committee of the Women's Hospital when the resident doctors
asserted their right to determine eligibility of patients on medical
rather than moral grounds.
Her cultural sponsorship included the fashionable and artistic Austral
Salon (among the earliest of the clubs for women), the Dante Society
and the Alliance Française. She persuaded her husband to donate
5000 pounds in 1889 for a Hostel for Women University Students (renamed
Janet Clarke Hall in her honour in 1921) and presided over its ladies'
committee until her departure in December 1891 on a family visit
to England. She severed all connection with it when Trinity College,
the recipient of her donation, steadfastly refused residence to
women from other colleges, but she renewed her financial support
some years later and in 1904 helped fund-raise for the University.
She served on the council of Melbourne Church of England Grammar
School for Girls.
Following her husband's death in 1897, she preferred Janet Lady
Clarke to Dowager Lady Clarke. In 1904 she was founding vice-president
of the Australian Institute of Domestic Economy which organised
cooking demonstrations, talks on child care, physiology, table decorations
and home upholstery. Its school (later the Emily McPherson College)
aimed to solve the domestic servant problem, to instruct the 'cottage
home' wife of the national importance of her work, and to provide
additional skills for women employing servants. It became the Education
Department's training school for teachers. Janet spoke frequently
of the need to enhance woman's domestic sphere.
She opposed giving women the vote but shortly before the 1903 federal
election (women were enfranchised for federal elections in 1902)
she organised a meeting at 'Cliveden' with the Victorian Employers'
Federation and 300 women to establish an organisation to educate
women against 'the disease called socialism'. As president of the
Australian Women's National League (and the associated club), she
founded the most powerful and successful women's political organisation
in Australia. She helped organise the Women's Work Exhibition in
1907 and called a conference of 'all anti-socialistic organisations
for women' at 'Cliveden'.
As a woman for whom marriage had conferred a title, enormous wealth,
power and influence, Janet was a proselytiser of a domesticity she
herself never practised. Her conservative appeal to the ontological
bond of motherhood was in direct opposition to a class view of society
then being propagated by intellectuals and the male-dominated Labour
parties. She used her considerable energy and talents to establish
and extend the institutional supports for the domestication of women,
thus helping to contain feminist demands for equality while providing
a public role for women as 'social housekeepers' and educators of
working-class women in their domestic duty.
Lesley L Scholes
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