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Doris
Blackburn 1889 - 1970 politician
Doris
Amelia Blackburn (1889-1970), civil rights activist, peace campaigner
and politician was born on 18 September 1889 in Auburn, Victoria,
daughter of Louisa Dewson (born Smith) and Lebbeus Hordern. Her
mother was liberal, tolerant and attracted to theosophy, but her
experience of the effects of the Boer War and alcoholism on her
husband and family led her to the Woman's Christian Temperance Union
and the Sisterhood of Peace, thus providing a model of social activism
to her daughters. Doris was educated at Hessle school but quickly
embarked on a career of political activism as Vida Goldstein's campaign
secretary and in the Women's Political Association. However, compassion
for the underprivileged and concern for social justice rather than
women's rights formed the core of her personal political philosophy,
and this was strengthened after her marriage in December 1914 to
Maurice Blackburn, lawyer and Labour Party Member for Essendon.
Their marriage, a political as well as a personal partnership, began
with vigorous campaigning against conscription, and opposition to
war assumed a central place in all her subsequent public activity.
Notwithstanding the birth of two sons and a daughter and her commitment
to promoting Maurice's career, she was involved in the Women's International
League for Peace and Freedom from 1918 (as president from 1928-30),
the Citizen's Education Fellowship, editing its monthly magazine,
and the Free Kindergarten Movement. A fourth child, a daughter born
in 1930, died at thirteen months, which greatly distressed her.
She turned to writing, contributing in 1935 'The Child Today' to
the Herald and writing for Woman Today. Her work for
social and economic justice was tempered by a conviction that war
wasted resources and undermined the freedoms it was supposed to
defend. As the threat of war grew stronger she concentrated her
energies as an executive member of the International Peace Campaign
on full-time, high profile activity to promote peace. This brought
her into conflict with the ALP from which she resigned in 1939.
She was not a pacifist: believing fascism a greater evil than war,
she reluctantly accepted the necessity of war and directed her energies
to the defence of civil liberties and pressure for a negotiated
settlement.
In 1946 a radical breakaway group of the ALP in Bourke suggested
she stand for the seat formerly occupied by her husband who had
died in 1944. She quickly established her credibility as an independent
Labor candidate and an intelligent and vocal federal politician.
Considerably more than a political widow, Blackburn revealed a well-developed
and individual political identity and a coherent program centred
on women's rights, family support, child care, education, housing,
welfare, civil rights and opposition to the testing and use of guided
missiles.
After her defeat in l949 in the general swing against Labor (and
disadvantaged by a redistribution), she placed the skills and confidence
acquired in parliament at the service of small organisations. A
mistress of the telephone 'round up' of supporters, finance, and
workers, and an expert chairperson, her skill lay in designing practical
measures to implement policy decisions. She continued her peace
advocacy through the Women's International League for Peace and
Freedom and the Woman's Christian Temperance Union. Her social justice
aims were pursued in the Council for Civil Liberties, the Howard
League for Penal Reform, the Women's Prison Council and the Save
the Children Fund. She maintained an active and practical interest
in the promotion of preschool education. Having observed at close
hand the plight of Aborigines at the Woomera rocket range, she helped
establish the Aboriginal Advancement League which in 1958 joined
with similar organisations to form the Federal Council for Aboriginal
Advancement, later Federal Council for Advancement of Aborigines
and Torres Strait Islanders (FCAATSI). She remained closely associated
with its work. She died on 12 December 1970.
Doris Blackburn was a woman of great energy, commitment and organisational
flair who sought to correct the injustices she saw around her but
was uncomfortable with programmatic solutions. She valued individual
effort highly and her great contribution to Australian public life
derives from a sustained involvement in activities designed to arouse
public awareness of the necessity for reform. Carolyn Rasmussen
Double Time edited by Marilyn Lake and Farley Kelly 1985
ch 39.
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