Kate Dwyer

Catherine Winifred "Kate" Dwyer (née Golding; 13 June 1861 3 February 1949) was an Australian educator, suffragist, and labour activist.

Kate Golding was born at Tambaroora, Wellington County, New South Wales to Joseph Golding (died 1890), a gold-miner from Galway, Ireland, and his Scottish wife, Ann (died 1906; née Fraser). She was educated at Hill End Public School.

In 1880 she began teaching at Tambaroora Public School, she taught at numerous public primary school in New South Wales until she married fellow school teacher Michael Dwyer in 1887. From 1894 they lived in Sydney where Kate became a member of the Womanhood Suffrage League of New South Wales, her sisters, Annie and Belle were also members.

She was a founder of the Women's Progressive Association in 1901, the organisation promoted the entry of women into legal professions and equal benefits for women following divorce. Interested in women's working conditions she also founded the Women Workers' Union for home and fringe factory workers. She was active in the "no conscription" during World War I. In 1916 Dwyer was the first woman in Australia to be elected a member of the Senate of the University of Sydney.[1] In May 1921 she was one of the first 61 women to be appointed justices of the peace in New South Wales.[2]

Legacy

A street in Cook, a suburb of Canberra, is named in her honour.

References

  1. "LADIES' LETTER". Gippsland Mercury (5, 781). Victoria, Australia. 27 October 1916. p. 4 (morning). Retrieved 30 March 2018 via National Library of Australia.
  2. "EVE'S MOVING FINGER". The Sydney Stock And Station Journal. XXXIII, (21). New South Wales, Australia. 14 June 1921. p. 3. Retrieved 30 March 2018 via National Library of Australia.
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