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Edith
Alice Waterworth (1873-1957), welfare worker, was born at Manchester,
England, to Emma (born Hamilton) and Henry Hawker, builder. The
family emigrated to Queensland where Edith and her sister were educated
at Brisbane Girls' Grammar School. She was a teacher before marriage
at the age of 30 to John Newham Waterworth, who brought her to Tasmania.
There were three sons to the marriage and Mrs Waterworth was in
her forties when she became active in the social and moral questions
which characterised the women's movement of that time.
She stood unsuccessfully for Parliament in 1922 and 1925. As with
many women from the milieu of welfare activity, she argued for woman's
special place in public affairs, as guardians of the human race
and especially of women and children; the latter's needs were only
truly understood by women. She wanted no more 'cumbersome deputations'
but a voice in Parliament; she likened the state to a large home
which needed both sexes to manage it.
Mrs Waterworth stood as the endorsed candidate of the Women's Non-Party
League, of which she was a long-serving president. In 1922 she campaigned
on rights for deserted wives, widows and their children and reform
of the criminal law. As a member of the Women's Criminal Law Reform
Association she called for the admission of women to juries, the
appointment of women as justices and new procedures to ensure women
under cross-examination had the support of a female companion. In
her second campaign she stressed health issues: bush nursing services,
a maternity hospital, a hostel and a domestic science training centre.
She presented it as a simple business proposition: the foundation
of national health was the wellbeing of mothers and children.
Waterworth became more deeply committed to maternal welfare in the
1930s. With Mrs Ransom, a Non-Party League colleague, she toured
the state in 1935, fundraising for the King George and Queen Mary
Maternity and Infant Welfare Jubilee appeal, on the slogan 'Make
Motherhood Worthwhile'. This forced her to re-work her priorities:
to raise the status of motherhood the position of woman in the home
must be improved. This phase in her activities culminated in 1937
in the convening of a state-wide conference to coordinate welfare
work for women and children, to which 99 organisations sent representatives.
The falling birth rate was one issue addressed. Mrs Waterworth seemed
to believe women would have more children if motherhood was made
easier. The conference also discussed ante natal and post natal
care, nursing services and housewifery and mothercraft training
in schools. The outcome was the formation of a Council for Mother
and Child, which ran, with Waterworth at its helm, for the next
eighteen years.
Mrs Waterworth was active in numerous organisations - National Council
of Women, Child Welfare Association, National Fitness Club, Free
Kindergarten Association, Board of Censors of Moving Pictures, and
others. She went on numerous deputations to Ministers and gave copious
testimony to parliamentary inquiries. She established good relationships
with the proprietors of the Hobart Mercury, and her frequent
and outspoken letters to the editor earned her the sobriquet of
Mrs Hot Waterworth. She was made a justice of the peace in 1931
and received an OBE in 1935. She was an active member of her numerous
associations until her death at the age of 84 in 1957.
Jill Waters
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