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Nellie
Constance Martyn (1887-1926), businesswoman, was born on 12 June
1887 at Charlton, Victoria, daughter of Lucy (born Partridge) and
James Martyn, both from Ballarat. James had been a schoolteacher
and a draper before he purchased in 1900 a steelworks at Brunswick,
Melbourne, which he renamed the Steel Co. of Australia. He twice
became president of the Victorian Chamber of Manufactures, and in
1923 represented Australian employers at the International Labor
Conference, Geneva.
Nellie became a hospital masseuse. After many unsuccessful attempts
to persuade her father to allow her to join the firm, he eventually
submitted, some time before 1914, after she had become proficient
in shorthand and typing and engineering drawing. She soon displayed
an acute financial brain and when her father went overseas in 1923
he left her, not his son, with his power of attorney. On his death
next year she took sole charge as managing director of what was
claimed to be the 'largest steel founders in the Commonwealth',
specialising in manganese and chrome steel, with well over 100 employees.
She mastered all aspects of the business and began converting the
buildings into a new model factory.
Nell Martyn was a Methodist and had long been active in the Young
Women's Christian Association, especially in its industrial clubs.
After a term as State treasurer, she became president in 1924 and
was closely involved with the move of the association's national
headquarters in Melbourne. She was first president of the Business
and Professional Women's Club (1925), and a member of the committee
of the Queen Victoria Memorial Hospital. In 1925 the Australian
Women's National League supported her preselection as nationalist
candidate for the State seat of Brunswick, but the male party majority
blocked it.
Highly capable in business matters, a good public speaker and a
constructive committee member, Miss Martyn was led by her Christian
perspective to interest in social service and workers' rights. She
did not seek publicity for herself. Her view of woman's position
was quite simple: the basis of women's equality was that the sexes
were of equal mentality - she asked no more than to compete on the
same terms as men and to represent the interests of the whole community
and not just women.
Knowing she was mortally ill, Nell Martyn spoke at YWCA gatherings
and others almost to the end. She died from cancer on 28 November
1926 at her family's Camberwell home. More than 1000 mourners, including
the leaders of the iron and steel industry, were at the graveside
where hundreds of wreaths from business firms were laid. Her obituaries
reflected wide-spread anguish at the loss of one so young, so admired
and who promised so much.
Oenone Serle
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