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Alice
Anderson 1897 - 1926 garage proprietor
Alice
Elizabeth Foley Anderson (1897-1926), garage proprietor, was born
on 8 June 1897 at Malvern, Melbourne, one of five children of Ellen
(born White-Spunner) and Joshua Noble Anderson. Though a brilliant
engineer who had once lectured mechanical engineering at the University
of Melbourne, her father was inept at business. After various ventures,
including a trip around the world, a partnership with John Monash
and a post at Dunedin, New Zealand, he secured the position of shire
engineer at Healesville, Victoria, in 1908, taking a cottage for
his family at nearby Narbethong.
The Anderson girls enjoyed country life. Alice who had previously
been tutored by a governess, attended the state school, rode a pony
and roamed the countryside with her brother Stewart, back from school
in England. He taught her to handle a fishing rod and a shotgun.
This was not mere sport, as fresh rabbit was welcome at the table.
Alice's mother was a well-read woman who encouraged all her daughters
to take up careers. In 1913 she used some of an annuity to pay for
five terms for Alice at Church of England Girls Grammar School,
Merton Hall. Although homesick, Alice did well, but had to leave
at the end of 1914 with a Junior Public Certificate, when the money
ran out. During 1915 Alice stayed home in Narbethong helping her
father in his office and acting as his 'chainman' on surveying jobs
around the district. She also coached her younger sisters for their
time at Merton Hall.
In 1916 Alice became a clerk in the office of the Town Clerk of
Caulfield Municipality, earning about 30 pounds a week. She had
learned mechanics and driving from employees in one of her father's
unsuccessful business ventures, the Healesville-Alexandra Motor
Service. In 1915 Anderson had put a deposit of 250 pounds on a 750
pounds Hupmobile limousine hoping to start a passenger service for
the shire. When this failed he gave Alice the car (and its debt)
for her eighteenth birthday.
In 1918, after further mechanical training and some success with
weekend excursions, she started a garage and hire-car service in
Cotham Road, Kew. Borrowing money, she bought more cars and employed
young women as mechanics and drivers. By 1919, 'Miss Anderson's
Motor Service' was established in a large brick garage. For the
next seven years, though often in debt, the all female business
successfully provided driving tuition, mechanical check-ups, hire
cars, motor tours and specialised chauffeuring. Other activities
for Alice included membership of the Lyceum Club for successful
professional women; inventing and patenting a trolley for easy access
under cars; writing on motoring for the magazine Woman's World
and in August 1926 a six week round tour to Alice Springs in a Baby
Austin. She returned 'sunburnt and happy', and had plans to start
a flying school after completing her pilot's licence. Tragedy struck
soon after, when hurriedly cleaning some firearms she had borrowed
for the trip, she accidentally shot herself on 17 September 1926.
After her death, her friend Ethel Bage (sister of Freda Bage (q.v.))
became proprietor and with her staff of six drivers and three mechanics
continued the business for another thirteen years. It then passed
into male ownership. The trade name 'Alice Anderson' is still used
for a Melbourne driving school.
Alice Anderson was a small, energetic young woman with a cheerful
personality. Her hair was cut in a shingle and her usual dress was
the breeches, leggings, coat and peaked cap of a chauffeur. She
laughed off rumours that, on the one hand, her business success
was backed by a 'boyfriend' or, on the other, that as she wore men's
clothes and employed women, she must be lesbian. She placed her
career above emotional ties, however, and refused at least one offer
of marriage.
Mimi Colligan
'Double Time edited by Marilyn Lake and Farley Kelly 1985
ch 33.
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