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Lillie
Goodisson 1860 - 1947 birth control advocate
Lillie
Elizabeth Goodisson (1860-1947), promoter of family planning, was
born at Holyhead, Wales, daughter of Frances Elizabeth (born Roberts)
and John Richard Price, physician. She trained as a nurse and when
aged nineteen she married Lawford David Evans, physician, in London.
They emigrated to Auckland, New Zealand, where their two children
were born.
By 1895, Lillie Evans had moved to Melbourne where she set up Myrnong
private hospital at St Kilda. She was widowed in 1903. In Fremantle,
Western Australia, on 11 June 1904 she married Albert Elliot Goodisson,
business manager. They lived at Geraldton until 1913 when Albert
went to Batavia for 'health reasons'. He died on 4 February 1914,
in the lunatic asylum where he had been committed for 'general paralysis'
and derangement. Emotionally and financially bereft, Lillie, with
the aid of a loan from her friend Ivy Brookes, returned to Melbourne.
During the 1914-18 war she worked as secretary for the women's division
of the People's Liberal Party, the Empire Trade Defence Association
and various patriotic causes. By 1919 she was also secretary of
the women's section of the Australian Industries Protection League.
Mrs Brookes helped establish her in a small library at Elwood, Melbourne,
in 1921 but mounting debts and ill health forced its closure.
In 1926 Lillie moved to Sydney where her daughter was living. There
she founded the Racial Hygiene Association of New South Wales (later
Family Planning Association of New South Wales) to promote sex education
and the eradication of venereal disease. As its general secretary
she advocated blood tests before marriage and the establishment
of family planning clinics. She believed judicious birth control
would eradicate inheritable disease, diminish maternal mortality
(by discouraging abortion) and result in an increased and healthier
population. When the Association's first free clinic opened in 1933
its publicity stressed the mother's health and the child's prospects:
its advice was available where there was 'hereditary disease' or
parents were unable to give a child 'a decent upbringing, proper
food, clothing and education'. She was criticised for advocating
'farm colonies' for 'mental defectives' though her concern in part
was to ensure continued institutional care for mentally handicapped
persons after the statutory age (eighteen years) at which they were
discharged from homes run by the Department of Child Welfare. She
joined the campaign to legalise surgical procedures for sterilisation.
Mrs Goodisson was an executive member of the National Council of
Women, treasurer for the Travellers' Aid Society, active in the
Good Film League of New South Wales and in promotion of Health Week.
She was opposed to the death penalty and condemned the Queensland
Government's 1929 declaration of open season for slaughter of koalas.
A woman of unusual force of character, she remained dedicated and
active into old age. Of her work for the Racial Hygiene Society
a fellow-worker said: 'she is the Society and without her there
would be no Society'. She died on 10 January 1947 at Cremorne Point,
Sydney.
Meredith Foley
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