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Mary
Ryan 1886 - 1968 Labor activist
Mary
Margaret Ryan (1886-1968), Labor activist, was born at St Johns
Wood, Timaru, New Zealand, on the 15 September 1886, third of eight
children of Deborah and Jeremiah Kelly, farmers. Mary's childhood
was stamped by the struggles of her family during the 1890s depression.
Educated to primary level at a one-teacher school, she excelled
at her work but was unable to continue. At thirteen she was managing
the household while her mother recovered from the post natal death
of twins. Mary exclaimed against 'a houseful of children in a much
too small home, never enough money and nothing but work, work, all
day long.' Her first paid employment was as domestic servant and
nursemaid. She trained as a nurse in Wellington and worked briefly
there before travelling to Sydney as a nurse-companion. She went
as sister-in-charge to the small hospital in Portland, New South
Wales, where social life was dominated by the industrial attitudes
of the largest employer, the cement works. On 15 August 1921 Mary
married Michael Thomas Ryan, a billiard marker. He was a former
cement worker who had lost a leg in an accident at the works, for
which he had received no compensation. They were both children of
Irish Catholic farmers forced to seek work off the land. A son and
a daughter were born in 1922 and 1923 respectively and another son
some years later. Mary resigned from the hospital on marriage but
returned intermittently as relief sister. Through the library of
the local School of Arts and a subscription to the Red Book Club
Mary read the works of the interwar socialists. Her political commitment
was sharpened by the experience of the 1930s depression: the long
lines of anxious men seeking work, the indignities of the dole and
the resultant poverty. She was outspoken in condemnation of industrial
capitalism. As a justice of the peace, she acted for most of the
1930s as an unofficial social worker within a community torn apart
economically. She lived a spirited political life as secretary then
president of her local Labor Party branch, attending regional and
state conferences, persistently seeking political support for the
needs of women and children in education, housing, employment and
community facilities. She was also active in the Country Women's
Association. One of her first successful campaigns was for a Baby
Health Centre in Portland.
Her marvellous sense of humour, warm and generous personality and
developed political intellect made her a popular and respected figure
in her area; J. B. Chifley was among the regular visitors to her
home. As Minister for Postwar Reconstruction in 1943, Chifley appointed
Mary Ryan to the Commonwealth Housing Commission. She was suddenly
propelled into two years of intensive travelling, interviewing,
correspondence and negotiating. Her main interest on the Commission
was to improve working conditions for housewives, to remove drudgery
through application of scientific design, and electricity: 'One
way of making mothers more reconciled to their post' was to offer
them a home equipped with modern facilities. She also enthusiastically
supported kindergartens and community centres.
On the Commission she came in contact with many women's organisations
and was particularly interested in the United Associations of Women
and the Australian Women's Charter. In 1943 with Jessie Street (q.v.)
she tried to increase the voice of women in ALP policy making; in
1944 she stood unsuccessfully in local government elections. Mary
returned to Portland in 1944 and to her role as a housewife, later
serving in a small corner store.
Although often very critical of conservative Catholicism, and ready
to set her Labor principles against priestly orthodoxy, she remained
a practising Catholic and saw her second son enter the priesthood.
In later years she travelled to Europe and Ireland and on her return
established a home in Sydney. After a long illness she died on 19
May 1968.
Carolyn Allport
All her Labours: Two, Embroidering the Framework 1984 ch
8.
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