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Famous Like Me > Actress > L > Mary Lee

Profile of Mary Lee on Famous Like Me

 
Name: Mary Lee  
   
Also Know As:
   
Date of Birth: 24th October 1924
   
Place of Birth: Centralia, Illinois, USA
   
Profession: Actress
 
 
From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia
Mary Lee

Mary Lee (née Walsh) (February 14, 1821 - September 18, 1909) was an Irish-Australian suffragist and social reformer in South Australia.

Mary Walsh was born in Ireland. She was married in 1844, although the identity of her husband is not known beyond his surname Lee, the couple had seven children however little more is known about her life in Ireland. Her son Ben moved to Adelaide, Australia, when he fell ill in 1897 Mary and daughter Evelyn immigrated to Australia. The travelled on the madien voyage of the steamship "Orient". Her son sadly died on November 2, 1880.

In 1883 Mary became active in the ladies' committee of the Social Purity Society. The Society advocated changes to the law relating to the social and legal status of young women, advocating an end to child labour to protect girls from abuse and preventing them from becoming prostitutes or child brides. The group's success was a passage in the 1885 Criminal Law Consolidation Amendment Act that raised the age of consent from 13 to 16.

The Social Purity Society also was concerned with the working conditions of women. After the bill was passed in 1885 the group began campaigning for workers' rights began. In December 1889 at a public meeting Mary Lee proposed the formation of a women's trade union. The Working Women's Trades Union was founded in 1890, Mary was the unions secretary for two years. In 1893 Mary attend the Trades and Labor Council meetings, served on the sub-committee which examined conditions in the clothing industry, and on the Distressed Women and Children's Committee which distributed clothes and food to the families hit by the economic depression of the '90s.

On July 13, 1888 Mary Lee, the Social Purity League, and others met and formed the South Australian Women's Suffrage League. She was the Leagues co-honorary secretary and for six and half years she fought for women's suffrage. Her own letters and reports of her speeches show that she was an astute and logical woman, employing sound argument, wit and humour in her correspondence and public speaking. In 1889 she wrote:

Let husbands, brothers fathers be kept in mind that it is the duty of every free man to leave his daughters as free as his sons. -as women assist in maintaining Government they have a right to a say how and by whom they shall be governed. Nineteenth century civilisation has accorded to women the same political status as to the idiot and the criminal. Such is the basis of our reverence for the person of women and of our estimate of her work.

Thee bills to grant women's suffrage were put forth in the South Australian parliament between 1889 and 1893, all failed. Spurred on by the grant of women's suffrage in New Zealand, Mary Lee, the Social Purity League, the Woman's Christian Temperance Union and the Democratic League traveled all over South Australia, which included the Northern Territory at the time, collecting signatures on a petition. On August 23, 1894 when the Adult Suffrage Bill was read in the South Australian parliament, the women presented the great petition. The petition contained 11,600 signatures, on paper sheets from all over the colony, that had been pasted together to make a roll 122 metres long. The bill passed on December 18, it granted women the right to vote and stand for parliament, and was the first legislation worldwide to do so.

Once women had the vote Mary Lee was active in voter education, encouraging women to enrol and vote. By her 75th birthday 60,000 women has enrolled to vote. in 1885 she was nominated to stand for parliment but refused.

In 1896 she appointed the honary position of the first and only female official visitor to the Lunatic Asylums. During this latter part of her life Mary Lee struggled financially and had to sell her library. She continued to correspond with women in other states where suffrage was not yet granted.

She died in 1909 from pleurisy following influenza. She was burried with her son Ben

Reference

  • Mansutti, E. 1994. Mary Lee (1821 -1909), State Library of South Australia

This content from Wikipedia is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article Mary Lee