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Fanny
Kate Boadicea Cocks (1875-1954), policewoman and welfare worker,
was born on 5 May l875 at Moonta, South Australia, eldest child
of Elizabeth (born George), schoolteacher, and Anthony Cocks, a
miner. In 1885 the family moved to a farm near Quorn. Kate was educated
at home; she taught for a year at Thomas Plains and in 1902 became
schoolmistress and sub-matron at the Industrial School, Edwardstown.
In 1903 she was employed as a clerk in the State Children's Department,
where she was influenced by Catherine Spence (q.v.). In 1906, anxious
to prove that women could deal with vagrant boys, Cocks became the
State's first probation officer for juvenile first offenders. She
believed prevention was better than prosecution and her work lessened
the number of children on parole who were placed in institutions.
In December 1915 Cocks was appointed the State's first woman police
constable, with particular responsibility for female offenders in
the areas of adolescent sexuality and alcoholism, and for social
welfare work with women and children. She and her assistant had
equal powers with her male colleagues with whom she worked easily;
she won respect and obedience from juniors in the plain clothes
women's branch, which she headed. Kate Cocks combined stern efficiency
with generous advice and help to needy women. Her originality, insight
and kindness, especially in the depression, led to a wealth of legends.
Moral but not censorious, she never used a baton nor carried a revolver.
She saw the equality of the sexes as 'a just conclusion', but believed
in the sacredness of child-rearing. Her staff had to take a first-aid
course which emphasised maternity care. Although slight and spare
she was proficient in ju-jitsu, and once helped a woman whose husband
beat her, by tutoring her in self-defence. She was a justice of
the peace and in 1935 was appointed MBE.
In 1935 Cocks retired to nurse her dying mother. Her speech in April
1935 on the problem of homeless girls persuaded the Methodist Women's
Home Mission Association to rent a cottage behind her home, and
in 1936 to buy a property at Brighton as a refuge for unmarried
mothers and their babies, and other infants needing care. Cocks
became voluntary superintendent of the Methodist Women's Welfare
Department, serving until 1951. She found fulfilment in this work,
moving to Brighton in 1937 to superintend the home. Her intellectual
and organisational ability has been obscured in some of the stories
of her kindness and strong religious faith. She died on 20 August
1954, leaving her home and estate to her Church and its Home for
Babies, later renamed the Kate Cocks Babies' Home.
Marie Mune
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