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Bessie
Guthrie 1905 - 1977 feminist
Bessie
Jean Guthrie (1905-1977), designer, publisher and feminist, was
born in Glebe, Sydney, on 2 July 1905, daughter of Jane Elizabeth
(born Thompson) and James Buchanan Mitchell. She was reared and
privately educated by her aunts, Janet Forbes Mackenzie Mitchell
and Margaret Crichton Mitchell, fiercely Scottish spinster schoolteachers
and lifelong companions who held firm beliefs on the education of
women. 'Never iron men's shirts', said Aunt Janet.
In 1923 Bessie was accepted as an art and design student at East
Sydney Technical College, specialising in industrial and modern
interior design, later becoming the first woman to hold an exhibition
of design art at the College. From 1928 she worked in design professionally
for various companies, sold designs for modular furniture and did
private consultancy as an interior designer in the controversial
modernist style. During the war she became head draughtswoman at
Hawker de Havilland's experimental aircraft (gliders) factory and
then for the Commonwealth government in aircraft design.
Enduring interests in politics and literature led her to publishing.
Her Viking Press, established in 1939, published anti-war material
and poetry, mainly by women (Dorothy Auchterlonie, Elizabeth Riddell,
Elizabeth Lambert, Muir Holburn, Harley Matthews), with artwork
and block designs by Bessie. Wartime paper shortages by 1943 ended
this pioneering venture.
In 1945 she found work with the YWCA, beginning her long involvement
with young women. She was not a Christian; her interests were educational.
As publicity officer she did press, radio and Cinesound News reports.
Later she taught and lectured in design at East Sydney Technical
College and the Workers' Educational Association. Her written and
radio work focussed on design in the home, stressing not only modernist
ideas of beauty and function but efficiency and the freeing of women
from drudgery. She created hilariously subversive time-and- motion
flowcharts on how to reduce housework to almost nothing (a goal
she perfected in her own later life).
A pre-war marriage of six months was followed in June 1950 by marriage
to painter Clive Guthrie, a member of the Realist Artists Group.
The other two mainstays of her life were Rosaleen Norton (painter,
writer and witch) and, especially, New Zealand born writer and journalist
Dulcie Deamer (known as 'Queen of Bohemia') with whom Bessie shared
an intimate friendship until Dulcie's death in 1971 (the year also
of Clive's death).
She was drawn into a new world in the 1950s when abused and homeless
children found their way to her Glebe backyard. Her knowledge and
consciousness of the role of the police, welfare agencies and the
state grew in time into a one-woman campaign to change the choices
of young girls in trouble and in need. She wrote hundreds of letters
to the press and to the Welfare Department and ran what amounted
to a half-way house in her own home, 'Aunty Bessie's', where one
wall was kept for girls to write messages to each other as they
came and went. She had limited success: some newspaper coverage
following the 1961 riots at Parramatta Girls Home, and a growing
network of ex-state wards and young prostitutes woven through her
everyday life.
In 1970 she discovered Women's Liberation, which provided political
companions and a context for her already developed ideas on the
failures of the nuclear family and the oppressiveness of the law
and police; of child rape and incest leading into prostitution,
poverty and homelessness among women. She joined the MeJane
(Australia's first Women's Liberation paper) collective, carrying
down to its offices her boxes of files. The anarchistic flair of
younger feminists plus her carefully researched campaigns resulted
in the ending of compulsory virginity tests in state institutions;
the closure of Hay Children's Prison; closer scrutiny of welfare
policies and the idea of 'exposure to moral danger'; and deepening
theoretical perspectives on how women are made by
patriarchy.
Bessie went on to be one of the founders of Elsie Women's Refuge,
to march on every International Women's Day and to enrich the lives
of all who worked with her. A life-long feminist, she identified
with the principles of anarchism, hated all laws and trusted the
cooperative way. Storyteller, bibliophile, sleuth, criminal, gourmet,
lover of shop-ping and cafes, she embodied the spirit of the inner
city at its best. Bessie died on 17 December 1977. Her funeral began
with a political street meeting outside her house where women told
stories of her life work. Police who did not believe it was a 'real'
funeral stopped the funeral procession on Gladesville bridge. Women
carried her coffin, sang her over, and honoured her spirit in a
final commemoration of her life.
Sue Bellamy
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