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Grace
Benny 1872 - 1944 local government councillor
Susan
Grace Benny (1872-1944), local government councillor, was born on
4 October 1872 at the Crown Inn, Adelaide, eldest daughter of Agnes
Ellen (born Harriot) and Peter Anderson, farmer. Grace, whose mother
died when she was nine, grew up on the family's sheepstation, 'Springfield',
Yorke Peninsula. She went to a small girls' boarding school at McLaren
Vale, then returned home and taught her younger sisters. On 16 July
1896 she married her cousin, solicitor Benjamin Benny.
They established a home, 'Stoneywood', in the suburb of Seacliff,
and had three daughters and two sons. Active in community life,
Grace was honorary secretary of the Seacliff Cheer-up Society during
the war and joined the local progress association and spinning and
croquet clubs. In 1918-19 she was on the Liberal Union Sturt District
committee and was president of the Brighton Women's Branch of the
Liberal Union.
Her husband had been mayor of Brighton, South Australia, in 1903-05,
and Grace became the first female member of a local government council
in Australia, on 22 December 1919. She spoke of being elected but
although she was nominated for the new ward, Seacliff, council procedure
meant that she was appointed by state government proclamation. She
was energetic, wiry and tenacious, 'one of those wholesome, cheery
women, broadminded and tolerant'.
Benny claimed credit for several improvements at Brighton: the opening
of a cliff to enable free access to the beach; the installation
of electric lights; and the allotment of reserves as a children's
playground and public garden. She successfully supported the abolition
of segregated sea-bathing, so that families could swim together.
Whereas legislators commonly believed that women were incapable
of attending night meetings, Benny regularly did so. She retained
her seat through two elections but left local government on losing
a mayoral contest in December 1922.
A justice of the peace from 1921, she heard state children's, police
and women's cases, applying what she called, with Kipling, 'God's
own commonsense' to administer justice. Her husband, a federal senator
in 1919-26, resigned and was convicted of embezzlement, sentenced
to three years' hard labour and declared insolvent.
Grace Benny relied on inherited money to help support her children,
all of whom lived with her. Unusually resourceful for a woman who
had never worked for a living, she moved her home to the city and
ran the Elite Employment Agency throughout the depression, to the
satisfaction of employers and unemployed, for many of whom she provided
a meal and a bed.
She separated from her husband and after his death married Cecil
Ralph Bannister, a tramway worker and clerk twenty years her junior,
in Melbourne on 23 February 1944. They lived in Adelaide, where
Grace continued her justice of the peace duties; she died on 5 November
1940. The Brighton Council named a crescent and a community centre
for women's groups after her.
Suzanne Edgar and Helen Jones
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