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Kate
Dwyer 1861 - 1949 Labor leader
Catherine
Winifred Dwyer (1861-1949), Labor leader, was born on 13 June 1861
at Tambaroora, New South Wales, second daughter of Ann (born Fraser)
and Joseph Golding, gold-miner. Kate was educated at Hill End Public
School and began teaching in 1880. After several country appointments
she resigned in 1887 on marriage to fellow schoolteacher Michael
Dwyer. Michael was headmaster at Broken Hill during the 1890s industrial
conflict before being transferred in 1894 to Marrickville, Sydney.
Kate's earliest political activity appears to have been as a member
of the Womanhood Suffrage League. She disagreed with Rose Scott
(q.v.) on the need for women to remain independent of party and
in 1901 was one of the founders of the Women's Progressive Association.
She was founding president of the Women's Organizing Committee of
the Political Labor League in 1904, a member of the State Labor
executive in 1905 and delegate to interstate conferences in 1908
and 1912. Her organising ability and the canvassing of the women's
vote by Labor women on a personal basis, contributed importantly
to Labor's electoral victories (State and federal) in 1910.
She was not ideologically committed but one of the moderate majority,
intent on using the state for educational and health reform and
industrial legislation. Like many in the Party, Kate confidently
expected compulsory arbitration to benefit workers; for women to
share those benefits she attempted in 1904 to form a Women Workers'
Union, but without much success. As its delegate to the Sydney Labour
Council she joined Labor-appointed royal commissions, into conditions
of employment for women and children, an alleged labour shortage
in Sydney, and supplies of food and fish to Sydney (1911-13).
Her radicalism was directed to town planning and worker housing,
and the appointment of women to public office, for which she worked
tirelessly and with some success in the gaols and the police. Her
most characteristic activity was educational reform, especially
the development of secondary education. She was nominated to the
Senate of the University of Sydney (1916-24) where she supported
moves for a degree in domestic science and more generally the University's
expansion into vocationally oriented faculties.
During the 1914-18 war, Mrs Dwyer was one of the organisers of the
anti-conscription campaign. She also applied her organising talents
to securing a military contract for unemployed needle-women. She
retained her position on the party executive, representing it at
the interstate conference at Brisbane in 1921 at which the party
adopted the socialisation objective. The New South Wales delegation
voted against it. In the bitter faction fighting which followed
Mrs Dwyer was a loser. Alone of the old moderates, she was re-elected
to the State executive in 1923 but she later lost her position on
it. She is credited with being one of a small group of women who
confronted J. T. Lang in 1925 when he had failed to include child
endowment and widows' pensions in his campaign speech, forcing him
to do so. She stood for Balmain but was not elected. (New South
Wales was briefly experimenting with multi-member electorates).
In 1926-27 Mrs Dwyer was an employees' representative on the Industrial
Commission, chaired by A. B. Piddington.
Kate Dwyer served on many committees, including those of the Benevolent
Society of New South Wales, the Royal Hospital for Women, the Renwick
Hospital for Infants, Scarba Home for Children, and the King George
V and Queen Mary Jubilee Fund for Maternal and Infant Welfare. A
devout Catholic, she died in the Sacred Heart Hospice for the Dying
on 3 February 1949.
Heather Radi
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