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Eleanor
Glencross (1876-1950), political organiser, was born on 11 November
1876 in Sydney, eldest daughter of Eleanor (born Lyons) and Angus
Cameron, carpenter and politician. She was educated at Cleveland
St Public School and Miss Somerville's Ladies' College. She gained
early political experience assisting her father, a liberal who had
been elected in 1874 with trade union support. Eleanor soon had
a reputation for eloquence. As political organiser for the Liberal
and Reform Association, she travelled widely in New South Wales,
and also to Queensland, to address political meetings. In 1911 she
moved to Melbourne to become general secretary, chief speaker and
organiser for the Australian Women's National League, which she
left for the People's Liberal Party. She returned to Sydney in 1913
as women's organiser for the Liberal Association of New South Wales.
On 14 March 1917 at St Stephen's Presbyterian Church, she married
Andrew William Glencross, grazier from Stawell. Her husband shared
her political interests and from 1918 they were resident in Melbourne.
She was in Melbourne in 1917 speaking in support of conscription.
Eleanor was a life-long supporter of liquor reform. She had a long
association with the Woman's Christian Temperance Union, serving
many years as Victorian president; she was active in the Victorian
Prohibition League, the temperance committee of the Presbyterian
church, and the Strength of Empire Movement, a postwar prohibition
organisation.
During the war Eleanor had joined the newly formed Housewives' Association
of Victoria. In 1919 she became president. The Association was aware
of the potential power of women as the nation's consumers and attempted
to mobilise this power for the benefit of all women. To assist working
class women it formed food cooperatives, organised boycotts and
lobbied governments about the cost of living. (Mrs Glencross was
appointed to the Victorian royal commission into the high cost of
living in 1923 as consumer representative.) Its fundamental concern
was the status of the work undertaken by women. In asserting the
importance of household management, the Association was seeking
to endow housework with national importance. It emphasised the value
of scientific home management and 'scientific spending'. In 1923
Mrs Glencross became president of the Federated Housewives' Association
of Australia.
She was an executive member of the Victorian National Council of
Women (from 1918) and president in 1927-28. She believed women should
be encouraged to stand for election to public office and helped
found the Women Citizens' Movement to support women candidates.
She stood, unsuccessfully, for election for the federal seat of
Henty in 1922, the Victorian seat of Brighton in 1928 (losing by
only 531 votes), and the federal seat of Martin in 1943. In 1927
she was among the first Victorian women appointed justice of the
peace.
On appointment to the Commonwealth Film Censorship Board in 1928,
Mrs Glencross moved to Sydney. The incoming Labor government decided
against her reappointment. After her husband's death in 1930, Eleanor
returned to paid employment as political organiser for the National
Association and later for the United Australia Party. She reformed
the Housewives' Association as an incorporated company in 1938 and
secured her own appointment as 'chairman' of directors. It was a
divisive move which led to damaging allegations of 'arrangements'
with manufacturers, and 'dictatorship'. In 1946 she was bankrupted
by a defamation suit arising from the expulsion of a member of the
Association but she retained her position on the board until her
death on 2 May 1950.
Meredith Foley and Heather Radi
Double Time edited by Marilyn Lake and Farley Kelly 1985
ch 38.
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