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Georgina
Sweet (1875-1946), zoologist and philanthropist, was born at Brunswick,
Melbourne, on 22 January 1875, daughter of Fanny (born Dudman) and
George Sweet. Her father, an industrialist and amateur geologist,
encouraged her to take up science. She was educated at Parkville
Ladies' College and at the University of Melbourne where she graduated
BSc (1896), MSc (1898) and, for her work on Nororyctes, the Australian
marsupial 'mole', DSc (1904); and where she pioneered the entrance
of women into several areas hitherto occupied only by men.
Her postgraduate work was in the Biology Department under Prof.
Baldwin Spencer to whom she was devoted and who considered her among
the best students he had ever had. From 1896, while pursuing her
researches, she taught in several of Melbourne's leading schools,
and served on the Council of The Association of Secondary Teachers
(1905-12). She also demonstrated to students in biology at the University
(from 1898), was lecturer in biology at Queen's College (1901-08)
and had a paper read before the Linnean Society of London (1900).
From 1909, she was lecturer and demonstrator in the Biology Department,
and lecturer in parasitology in the Veterinary Faculty. In 1911
she won the Syme Prize for her work on worm-nodules in cattle and,
while on study leave in 1913-14, she undertook an enquiry for the
federal government into worm- nodules in cattle overseas. On T.
S. Hall's death, she became second- in-command in the Biology Department,
and during Spencer's absence for five months in 1916-17, became
the first woman in Australia to act as professor. When Spencer retired
in 1919, Sweet was unsuccessful in her application for the chair
but in 1920 she became the first woman associate professor in the
University. Her health deteriorated during the 1920s and she virtually
retired from Zoology in 1924 and resigned from all formal teaching
in 1926; though as an honorary lecturer she still gave some lectures.
From the beginning, Sweet had taken an active part in almost all
sides of University life. She served on the Science, Veterinary
(acting-dean 1924) and Agriculture Faculties for many years. She
was on the Council of the Graduates Association, on the executive
committees of the Science Club and the women students' club, she
gave popular lectures on scientific subjects for the University
Extension Board and was honorary secretary of the University union
in 1912, when it was established in the new Union House. Although
she did not see herself as one of the 'new women', she was always
a vigorous supporter of women's rights. She pushed to have women
admitted to the University Senate, and for seventeen years was president
of the provisional council which worked for the establishment of
the University Women's College, which she served for the rest of
her life. In 1937, elected by fellow graduates, she became the first
woman member of the Council of the University.
Sweet was equally energetic outside the University and became involved
in national and international affairs as well as professional bodies.
She was for many years an active member, often office bearer, of
the Australasian Association for the Advancement of Science, the
Royal Society of Victoria, the Field Naturalists Club, and the Lyceum
Club. She worked for the local YWCA, for seven years as president,
and was appointed a vice-president of the World YWCA in 1934. She
was an active member of the Victorian Women Graduates' Association,
and sometime delegate to the Australian body, and to the Council
of the International Federation of University Women. In the early
1930s she was president of the Pan-Pacific Women's Association.
In 1935, when she was awarded the OBE, representatives of more than
20 organisations in which she was involved gathered to congratulate
her. Her contemporaries stressed her generosity, her hospitality,
especially to newcomers from overseas, and her ready but unobtrusive
and helpful kindness. Her greatest recreation was travelling. Her
journeys included a trek through Africa from the Cape to Cairo with
Jessie Webb, and extensive travel in East Asia. She had deeply-held
religious beliefs and belonged to the Methodist Church. She died
on 1 January 1946.
Monica MacCallum
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