|
Deborah
Hackett 1887 - 1965 mining entrepreneur
Deborah
Vernon Hackett (1887-1965), mining entrepreneur and charity worker,
was born on 18 June 1887 at Guildford, Western Australia. Her father
was surveyor Frederick Drake-Brockman and her mother Grace (born
Bussell) heroine of the 1876 shipwreck near Margaret River, where
Deborah herself spent much of her youth. She was educated as one
of the few girl pupils at Guildford Grammar School for boys. She
was an intrepid bareback rider, an explorer of caves and later,
a skier. On 5 August 1905 she married 57-year-old lawyer Dr John
Winthrop Hackett at Busselton. The marriage was happy. They had
five children of exceptional ability: of their four daughters one
became a lawyer, one a doctor and one a linguist. Their son, General
Sir John Hackett, became Commander-in-Chief of the British Army
on the Rhine, Deputy Chief of the Imperial Staff and, on retirement,
principal of King's College, University of London.
Dr Hackett was editor and part proprietor of the West Australian
newspaper. When knighted in 1911 after he had refused a knighthood
in 1902, it was thought his acceptance was due to the influence
of his young and social wife. He was appointed KCMG in 1913. He
died in 1916, leaving nearly half a million pounds to the University
of Western Australia. Lady Hackett published the Australian Household
Guide, a large compendium of household lore and cookery, in
1916, the proceeds going to war charities, for which the French
government honoured her. A second edition of the Guide in
1940 raised funds for the Red Cross.
In 1918 Lady Hackett married Frank Moulden, solicitor and Mayor
of Adelaide from 1920-22. She was known as Lady Hackett-Moulden
until he was knighted in 1922 and she became Lady Moulden. She called
and presided over the meeting in May 1920 when the South Australian
National Council of Women was reestablished after a lapse of over
12 years. She was also State Commissioner of the Girl Guides Association.
In 1923 she joined shearing contractor F.W.Young to form a syndicate
to mine tantalite at Wodgina, 105 km from Port Hedland. This mine
had been the major world source of high grade tantalum ore since
1905 and produced 70 tons between 1925 and 1929. Lady Moulden became
Chairman of Directors of Tantalite Ltd in 1931; her other interests
included wolfram and beryl mines in the Northern Territory and a
partnership in the 275,000 ha Minilya Pastoral Co. Ltd property
north of Carnarvon. She was a pioneer in the use of air travel and
was a passenger on the first commercial flight from Australia to
England in 1934. She sometimes travelled up to 40,000 km a year
in single engine charter planes in outback Australia. She loved
flying: 'I'll be flying till I die, my last flight will be feet
first to Karrakatta,' she told a journalist.
She inherited her love for and knowledge of geology from her father,
and took an active and forceful role in promoting the development
of her mines in both Britain and the United States. The main buyer
for the Wodgina ore was a Chicago company which sent the refined
product to Britain to use in radar. Attempts to refine tantalite
in the British Commonwealth were unsuccessful. The mines closed
in 1940 and were taken over by the Australian government in 1943
for urgent war supplies.
The University of Western Australia conferred an honorary LLD on
Lady Moulden at the opening of Winthrop Hall in 1932. As her husband
had recently died, she did not attend in person. She married Justice
Basil Buller Murphy, nine years her junior, in 1936 and became known
as Dr Buller Murphy, as a newspaper snidely reported: 'No doubt
having become accustomed to something more distinguished than Mrs'.
She was a prominent Victorian society hostess in her Toorak and
Kilsyth homes and active in many hospital and welfare charities.
She published An Attempt to Eat the Moon, a book of Aboriginal
legends, in 1958 and compiled the vocabulary, songs and music of
the extinct Dordenup people whom she had known in her youth. She
died aged 77 on 16 April 1965 and was buried at Karrakatta cemetery,
Perth, next to her first husband.
Deborah was a versatile woman who was equally at ease in the remote
desert as she was as a notable hostess who served lavish and exotic
food at her unusual and original parties. She was a tireless worker
for charity, raising thousands of pounds for welfare work. Her interest
in the neglected girls of Perth and in war orphans was possibly
aroused by early widowhood and consciousness of her own good fortune.
Asked if she were Australia's wealthiest woman, she replied: 'Nonsense.
Never was. I'm certainly not a pauper, but I'm not really wealthy.'
A true philanthropist, she had given much money to various good
causes, many of which were concerned with the welfare of women and
children.
Prue Joske
Prue Joske, Lady Hackett's Household Guide Early Days 1978
pp 68-83.
|