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Alicia
Petersen 1862 - 1923 political candidate
Alicia
Teresa Jane O'Shea Petersen (1862-1923), political candidate, was
born on 2 July l862 into a Catholic family to Jane (born Wood) and
Hugh McShane, farmers at Broadmarsh, southern Tasmania. In 1884
she married Patrick O'Shea, draper and widower with a son, Francis
Patrick. When he died in 1886 she was left to care for her stepson
with a small annuity and a house in Wilmot Terrace, Hobart, in which
she lived until her death. She remarried, in 1891, to Hjalma Petersen,
a mining investor from Gotland, Sweden, and was widowed again in
1912. There were no children to either marriage.
The events that wrought a farmer's daughter of convict background
into a socially committed political reformer are obscure, but Alicia
grew up in a small rural community with her cousin John Earle, a
founder of the Workers' Political League (in 1903) and first Labor
premier of Tasmania (1909). Until her marriage she worked as a machinist
in the notoriously sweated clothing industry. During 1906 in the
campaign to secure a Royal Commission into conditions in workshops,
Alicia was a prominent speaker for the Citizens' Social and Moral
Reform League, led by the Christian Socialist Anglican Bishop of
Tasmania, Edward Mercer. The League's aims included social purity,
temperance and improved housing for the poor. The damning evidence
about prominent Hobart citizens before the Royal Commission during
1907 led to the suppression of its report.
Mrs O'Shea Petersen served her political apprenticeship in the League
and in the Women's Political Association. Though she expressed sympathy
with Labor women who, in 1912, formed the Housewives' Association,
she remained committed to a non party stance. She expressed her
ardent support for personal self-improvement in entirely practical
ways: as a founder and life president of the Australian Women's
Association, a friendly society for women and an offshoot of the
nationalistic Australian Natives Society; by qualifying for the
certificate in sanitation from the Royal Sanitary Institute; as
a councillor of the Workers' Educational Association and an advocate
of free university education.
She was the first woman in Tasmania to stand as a political candidate,
contesting the federal seat of Denison in 1913. She sought election
to represent the interests of women and children but she held broader
political policies which the press ignored. Her policies were trivialised,
she was accused of accepting funds from both political parties,
and women organisers were brought from Victoria to present the Nationalist
and Labor programs for women voters against her. She polled 261
votes.
Through the Women's Health Association, Mrs Petersen was instrumental
in establishing the Bush Nurses and Child Health Associations. Never
afraid of unpopular issues, she organised the women's anti-conscription
campaign in Tasmania, appearing with Vida Goldstein (q.v.) during
her 1917 visit. She also led a campaign to have the age of consent
raised, initially a very unpopular demand among politicians.
In 1922 when women were first eligible to stand for the Tasmanian
House of Assembly, she was again a political candidate in Denison.
During the campaign, while involved in litigation over a boundary
dispute and charged with contempt, she felt herself a victim of
an unjust legal system and risked gaol rather than comply. The press
accused her of seeking cheap publicity. An abdominal cancer prevented
any public appearances and she polled badly. She died on 22 January
1923 at her home not far from that other House where she had hoped
to sit as a legislator for the women and children of Tasmania.
Vicki Pearce
V F Pearce A Few Viragos on a Stump: the Womanhood Suffrage Campaign
in Tasmania 1880-1920 1985.
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