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Doris
Isabel Beeby (1894-1948), union organiser, was born on 30 July 1894,
one of four children of Helena Maria (born West) and (Sir) George
Stephenson Beeby, Labor politician and judge in arbitration. Doris
was educated at the Church of England Grammar School for Girls,
Sydney, and at the University of Sydney as an unmatriculated Arts
student. In 1920 following her father's appointment as a judge of
the New South Wales Industrial Court of Arbitration and president
of the Board of Trade, Doris became his associate. She was his assistant
at the inquiry into the proposed reduction in working hours for
the iron and building trades from 48 to 44, which his report supported.
Doris continued as her father's associate on his appointment in
1926 to the Commonwealth Arbitration Court. The thrust of his awards
was always towards approving practices which raised productivity,
and to linking wage levels to increased profitability. Several of
his awards proved controversial. Doris was secretary to the royal
commission (held by her father in 1931) to inquire into the prosecution
of J. Johnston in 1928.
In 1939-40 she was London where she joined the Spanish Relief Movement,
which assisted refugees from the civil war in Spain, and the Communist
Party of Great Britain. On her return to Sydney she joined the Australian
Communist Party and from 1942-45 she worked as an organiser for
the Sheetmetal Workers' Union. She had particular responsibility
for the conditions of employment of the great many women recruited
to the industry under wartime manpower controls, and for their case
for equal pay before the Women's Employment Board. Previously women
had in effect been barred from this area of employment by union
opposition but it now supported their right to work and to equal
pay. Doris did factory work herself. A delegate recalls she 'went
out of her way to mix with workers and get to know them and work
for them and with them'. When the union established
a women's committee it was not, as in other unions, largely wives
of unionists doing mainly welfare work but women workers fighting
to enhance their industrial position. With the closing down of specifically
wartime production and the re-employment of ex- servicemen the number
of women in the union fell rapidly in 1946, and Beeby resigned her
position as organiser.
She wrote for the Tribune and for the Australian Women's
Digest, the monthly journal of the United Associations of Women.
Through the United Associations she was involved in the Women for
Canberra Movement and the Australian Women's Charter. The latter
was an attempt by women from many organisations to articulate the
needs of women in the postwar social order and to mobilise women
as a political force to ensure those needs were included in postwar
reconstruction. Though the Charter gathered wide support in 1944-45
its promise was never realised, the cold war dividing its supporters
and finally destroying the movement.
After a long illness Doris Beeby died of cancer on 17 October 1948.
She was widely admired for the strength of her commitment to the
fight for better conditions for workers.
Heather Radi
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