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Gertrude
Halley 1867 - 1939 doctor
Ida
Gertrude Margaret Halley (1867-1939), medical officer, was born
on 1 August l867 at Ballarat, Victoria, daughter of Margaret Halley
(born Fletcher) and Rev. Jacob John Halley. Educated at the Presbyterian
Ladies' College, she was among the first women medical students
at the University of Melbourne (MB BS 1896). She practised with
Dr Kent Hughes in Melbourne and was a founder and treasurer of the
Queen Victoria Hospital for Women. She became honorary surgeon there
and an eye and ear specialist after research in London and Shanghai.
In 1906 Halley was appointed to assist the chief health officer
in Tasmania as medical inspector of schools. With Dr Hogg of Launceston
she devised an eye test for children which was adopted throughout
Australia and in other parts of the Empire. In 1910 she moved to
Sydney to a similar appointment and also gave lectures at the Teachers'
Training College. In 1913 she was chosen to establish the long-awaited
medical branch of the Education Department in South Australia. Accompanied
initially by one school nurse, she began the examination of 50,000
children at the rate of 100 a day. She made extensive use of meetings
of parents since, like her close friend and colleague Lydia Longmore,
inspector of infant schools, she believed that educating mothers
and fathers was one of the best means of improving children's health.
They pioneered the use of intelligence tests in South Australian
schools and promoted the separate and skilled teaching of mentally
retarded children. Halley supported the playgrounds movement, as
vice-chairman of the playgrounds section of the Town Planning Exhibition,
Adelaide, and Education Department representative on the playground
committee of the Town Planning Association. She did significant
work in trachoma prevention. By 1925 she headed a staff of sixteen,
including three dentists, five medical assistants, three nurses
and a psychologist, Dr Constance Davey (q.v.). The press commented
that she 'had been fighting against heavy odds with skill, enthusiasm
and courage' to get her 'forward' policies accepted. She retired
in 1931.
She was prominent in the Women's Non-Party Political Association
(later League of Women Voters) and was chairwoman of the League
of Loyal Women, 1916-22. When the National Council of Women was
reformed in South Australia in l920 she became a committee member
(1920-30) and was convenor of its standing committee on public health
from 1927-29. The commitments reflected her endorsement of contemporary
feminists' contention that women could contribute much to the wider
society; they also related to her religious beliefs. Raised in a
Congregational manse, she was encouraged to develop a concern for
reform. She was an active member of the Clayton Church and the Congregational
Church Women's Society of South Australia. She also displayed some
skill as an artist in ceramics.
After a period of ill heath, Gertrude Halley died at her home at
Maylands on 1 October 1939. She is remembered as the donor of an
annual prize to perpetuate the memory of John Christie Wright, former
principal of the South Australian School of Arts and Crafts, who
had died in 1917 in the war in France. A portrait by her friend
Marie Tuck is held by the Queen Victoria Memorial Hospital, Melbourne.
Elizabeth Kwan
C.M.Davey Children and their Law-makers l956.
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