Catherine
Helen Spence, journalist, social reformer and novelist, was the leading woman in
public affairs at the turn of the century in Australia. She was in the vanguard
of first-wave feminism seeking equality of opportunity for women in this
country, and was lauded as the ‘Grand Old Woman of Australia’. From the
pulpit to the platform, she championed the rights of women, lobbied for greater
child welfare provision, and argued for a more democratic electoral system.
Spence
was born in Melrose, Scotland, in 1825. She emigrated to South Australia at the
age of 14 with her parents and siblings and initially worked as a governess and
briefly ran a small private school.
Nurturing
literary ambitions since childhood, in her mid-twenties Spence began occasional
paid journalism, a career which became long and distinguished. Her clear,
wide-ranging articles were mainly on literature, politics and social issues. She
is credited as the first woman novelist in Australia to portray antipodean
issues with the publication in 1854 of her first novel, Clara Morison: A
Tale of South Australia During the Gold Fever. The plots and characters of
this novel and subsequent ones drew on her own experiences and circle of
associates.
Around
1856, Spence converted from the Presbyterianism of her upbringing to
Unitarianism. She became South Australia’s first woman preacher when she
delivered a sermon to the Adelaide congregation in 1878.
Spence’s
faith imbued her philanthropic endeavours. In 1872, she had co-founded the
Boarding-Out Society, a voluntary organisation which superintended the
fostering-out of state dependent children. She alternated between the offices of
Honorary Treasurer and Honorary Secretary from 1872 until 1886. The next year
the Society’s functions were taken over by the new State Children’s Council.
She was an active member of the Council from its inception until just before her
death. In 1897 she was the first woman appointed to the Colony’s Destitute
Board, commissioned in 1849 to alleviate poverty.
An
advocate of public education, in 1877 she was appointed to a local school board
and supported the establishment in 1879 of the first government secondary
school, the Advanced School for Girls. A year later, the South Australian
Education Department published her book The Laws We Live Under. This
textbook broke new ground by outlining citizens’ rights and responsibilities.
It foreshadowed the introduction of courses on civics and legal studies in
curricula across the country throughout the twentieth century.
Her
interest in electoral reform was sparked in 1859 by an article on the Thomas
Hare system of proportional representation, by the English social philosopher
John Stuart Mill. She became an inveterate pamphleteer on the topic of
proportional representation and in 1892 she proposed a modified version. Three
years later she formed the Effective Voting League of South Australia and
campaigned for the introduction of the scheme into the Colony’s electoral
system.
In
1891 Spence joined the growing movement to secure the vote for women and became
a Vice-President of the Women’s Suffrage League. She pushed the suffragists’
claims during her electoral reform campaign and throughout her 1893–94 lecture
tour of the United States and Britain. She returned in December 1894 to witness
the historic passing of the Constitution Amendment Bill through Parliament
giving voting rights to the women of South Australia, the first Australian
colony to do so.
Spence
became Australia’s first female political candidate when she contested,
unsuccessfully, the election for delegates to the 1897 Australasian Federal
Convention. She had campaigned on the single issue of proportional
representation.
In
1909, Spence presided over the formation of the Women’s Non-Party Political
Association, which later became the League of Women Voters of South Australia.
Catherine
Helen Spence died on 3 April 1910 in Norwood, Adelaide, while working on her
autobiography, published posthumously later that year. She never married.
The
Catherine Helen Spence Scholarship was established by the South Australian
Government in 1911 to perpetuate her memory. It is generally awarded every four
years to a South Australian woman to study social problems in Australia and
abroad.
In
1999, a plaque honouring Spence’s achievements was installed at her Scottish
birthplace.
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