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Florence
Cardell-Oliver 1876 - 1965 politician
Annie
Florence Gillies Cardell-Oliver (1876-1965), politician, was born
at Ararat, Victoria, daughter of Annie Thompson and Johnson Wilson.
She was educated in Victoria and England. Florence married Arthur
Cardell- Oliver, medical practitioner, in England and they had two
sons. They left London c. 1913 for Perth. During the war Mrs Cardell-Oliver
participated in recruiting campaigns and after the war returned
to England to oversee her sons' education.
Following her husband's death in 1929, Florence returned to Western
Australia, where in 1934 she contested the federal seat of Fremantle,
standing against John Curtin who was elected. She published Empire
Unity or Red Asiatic Domination (1934). In 1935 she travelled
abroad to Spain, Italy and Germany, and in 1936 stood as Nationalist
candidate for the State seat of Subiaco, winning by one vote in
an election which returned a Labor government. She is said to have
selected the seat because a majority of electors were women. When
asked why she did not live in her electorate, she said, 'but I do
live in Subiaco, I only sleep in Perth'.
She commented in her maiden speech on having been required to remove
her hat in the House: she had been told there were no 'women' in
Parliament and she hoped that that meant there were no men. Her
political opponents tried to embarrass her by drawing attention
to her ignorance of Parliamentary procedure, but usually she had
a sharp reply.
She followed her party's line but on occasions took an independent
initiative: in 1936 she introduced a private member's bill to amend
the Child Welfare Act, intended to give greater protection to mothers
where custody of children was in dispute. She took a lone stand
against the 1939 Contraceptives bill which, on the model of an earlier
Victorian Act, imposed a total ban on all forms of advertising.
She called for a consumer representative on the Milk Board. While
the depression lasted she gave her parliamentary salary for relief
of unemployment.
In 1947 Cardell-Oliver was made an honorary minister; in 1948 she
was given responsibility for supply and shipping and in 1949-53
was Minister for Public Health as well as for Supply and Shipping;
she was the first female member of an Australian cabinet. She effected
the introduction of compulsory testing for tuberculosis and the
distribution of free milk for schoolchildren. In every session of
Parliament she had pursued the availability of milk to poorer families,
stressing its nutritional value. She is also credited with having
persuaded the Western Australian Government to offer research facilities
to Dr Gye and Dr Mann (q.v.). Cardell-Oliver was created DBE in
1951.
Dame Florence retired from politics in 1956. She was active in many
community organisations including the Women's Service Guilds, the
West Australian Painters and Arts and Craft Society, the Progressive
Education League, the Victoria League and the Women's Hockey Association.
She left for England in 1959 returning in 1965 shortly before her
death. She was a woman who seemed never to doubt her own ability,
an anti-socialist with a deep distrust of bureaucrats.
Heather Radi
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