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Marie
Kirk 1855 - 1928 temperance advocate
Maria
Elizabeth Kirk (1855-1928), temperance advocate and social reformer,
was born probably on 9 December 1855 in London, daughter of Maria
Elizabeth and Alfred Peter Sutton, salesman's assistant. On 14 September
1878 she married Frank Kirk, an ironmonger's assistant and later
a bootmaker. Reared in the Quaker faith, Marie Kirk worked as a
missionary in London's slums and in her late twenties became active
in the British Women's Temperance Association. She represented it
in 1886 at a meeting held in Toronto, Canada, to organise the World
Woman's Christian Temperance Union. Later that year the Kirks migrated
to Victoria and settled first at Warragul before moving to Camberwell.
In November 1887 Mrs Kirk played a large part in establishing the
Woman's Christian Temperance Union of Victoria, an offshoot of the
American organisation founded in 1874 by Frances Willard to fight
the liquor traffic and promote social and moral reforms. After serving
briefly as recording secretary of the new union, in February 1888
Kirk became colonial (later general) secretary of the WCTU of Victoria.
She also edited the WCTU journal, White Ribbon Signal, from
its inception in 1892, and later served for many years as president
of the union's Melbourne branch. In May 1891 she became secretary
of the newly formed WCTU of Australasia and in 1897 represented
the Victorian body at temperance conventions in Britain and the
United States. In 1902, as a delegate of the WCTU, she helped establish
the National Council of Women of Victoria and served on its executive
committee until 1913. Kirk resigned as secretary of the WCTU of
Victoria late in 1913 because of ill health, but remained an active
member for some years longer.
Mrs Kirk was a 'rather fragile, delicate little woman', yet her
'passionate earnestness', 'winning manner' and 'more than ordinary'
organising ability made her 'the heart of the movement'. Her wide-
ranging activities included founding new branches of the union,
managing its headquarters, raising funds and running a club for
working girls. She imbued the White Ribbon Signal with her
ardent Christian piety, together with lively feminist views and
a keen interest in social reform, preoccupations which reflected
the WCTU's commitment to 'home protection'.
In 1891 she organised and presented to Parliament a huge women's
petition for enfranchisement; and in 1894 was a founding committee
member of the Victorian Women's Franchise League. During the 1890s
she also led the WCTU's successful defence of a higher age of consent
for girls. Aroused by the 'sweating evil' of those depression years,
she supported equal pay for women and the introduction of female
factory inspectors. Her visits among women prisoners made her advocate
appointment of female gaol attendants, and her own efforts contributed
greatly to the introduction of police matrons in 1909. With both
the WCTU and the National Council of Women Kirk did much to bring
into being the Children's Court Act of 1906. She was also actively
interested in free kindergartens for children of inner suburbs;
in 1909 she founded the WCTU's South Richmond kindergarten, which
later bore her name as a memorial to her work. She died on 14 January
1928. Her WCTU colleagues paid eloquent tribute to her 'wisdom,
courage, tact and ability' and her 'splendid pioneer service', setting
upon her grave the epitaph: 'Her works do follow her'.
Anthea Hyslop
Double Time edited by Marilyn Lake and Farley Kelly 1985
ch 14.
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