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Eleanor
Mary Hinder (1893-1963), international public servant, was born
on 19 January 1893 at Maitland, New South Wales, third daughter
of Sarah Florence (born Mills) and John Hinder, headmaster. Educated
at Maitland West Girls' High School, Teachers' College and the University
of Sydney (BSc 1914), she taught biology at North Sydney Girls'
High and gave tutorials for the Workers' Educational Association.
She held office in the Student Christian Movement and the Women
Graduates' Association.
In 1919 Eleanor Hinder was appointed welfare superintendent at Farmer
& Co. Ltd, one of the first such appointments by an Australian firm.
She advised on training and placements, formed a social club, and
with Jean Stevenson from the Young Women's Christian Association
founded the City Girls Amateur Sports Association. While promoting
loyalty to the company she also encouraged its young female employees
to use leisure constructively and to keep fit. During the inquiry
into the minimum wage she opposed employer submissions for a reduction,
mobilising National Council of Women support: '. . . to safeguard
the moral and spiritual issues in the lives of women it is inadvisable
that the Basic Wage for women descend below the present rate of
2 pound 1 shilling a week'.
In 1924 Eleanor travelled overseas to investigate industrial welfare
in America and Europe where she studied the work of the International
Labour Organisation. She attended the Congress of the International
Federation of University Women in Oslo. En route she visited Shanghai
at the invitation of the YWCA in China. In 1926 she resigned from
Farmers to go to China for two years on a Rockefeller fellowship.
There had been recent industrial trouble in Shanghai; the British
dominated Shanghai Municipal Council resisted any regulation of
labour and the extra-territorial status of the International Settlement
prevented Chinese labour laws from operating within the Settlement.
Eleanor became a publicist for regulation, especially in regard
to the employment of women and children. Her meeting with A. Viola
Smith, an American assistant trade commissioner, led to an intimate
lifelong friendship. In 1928 Eleanor was a delegate to the Pan Pacific
Women's Conference in Honolulu. On a visit home she published a
series of articles on 'rebuilding' China. She went as Australian
delegate to the Kyoto conference of the Institute of Pacific Relations
(1929) and resumed her work in China. After another study trip to
America and Europe in 1932, she was appointed chief of Shanghai
Municipality's newly created Industrial Division. Though Chinese
labour law remained unenforceable, she effected some improvements
in health and safety and industrial training. After the Japanese
invasion of China in 1937, care of orphans became her main work.
When Australia was drawn into the war in 1941, Hinder became a prisoner
of war but was repatriated in 1942, to London, where she joined
the British Foreign Office and was sent to Montreal to work for
the International Labour Organisation.
Her appointment in 1944 as British representative on the Far Eastern
subcommittee of the United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Association
Technical Committee marks the beginning of a distinguished career
with the United Nations. She was appointed OBE in 1950. In 1951
she resigned from the Foreign Office to become chief of the Project
Planning Division of the Technical Assistance Administration of
the United Nations for Asia and the Far East, becoming chief of
operations in l953. She was officially retired in 1956 and, failing
in an attempt to secure American citizenship, established a home
in Sydney with her friend Viola Smith, but she continued her work
for the United Nations under contract. On her way to New York on
10 April 1963 she died at San Francisco of coronary occlusion. Some
of her fine collection of Chinese ceramics went to the Art Gallery
of New South Wales. In 1975 with funds from the National Advisory
Council for International Women's Year, Viola Smith published Women
in Australian Parliaments and Local Government Past and Present.
When Viola died in 1976 she bequeathed an award for a biography
to be written of her friend.
Meredith Foley and Heather Radi
Frances Wheelhouse Eleanor Mary Hinder 1978.
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