Jump to content

User:AdaWoolf/Feminist things

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Feminist things is a page of things that I am working on creating.

Person Template User:AdaWoolf/Setup for a page

Talk page Template User:AdaWoolf/Setup for a talk page

Organisation User:AdaWoolf/Setup for an organisation page

Category:Feminist organisations in Australia

Category:Women's organisations based in Australia

Feminism

[edit]

Melbourne Feminists

[edit]
  • Thelma Solomon


MORE RED

[edit]

MORE BLUE

[edit]
  • Caroline Chisholm – English-born Australian humanitarian (1808–1877)
  • Catherine Spence – Scottish-born Australian author, teacher, journalist, politician and suffragist
  • Charles Strong – Scottish-born Australian preacher and minister
  • Clarence Weber – Australian wrestler
  • Constance Ellis – Australian physician (1872–1942)
  • David Hay – Scottish footballer and manager
  • Dora Serle – Australian artist (1875–1968
  • Doris Carter – Australian athlete and military officer (1912–1999)
  • Edith Onians – (1866–1955) voluntary welfare worker
  • Edith Summerskill – British politician (1901–1980)
  • Edith Barrett – American actress (1907–1977)
  • Edith Cavell – British nurse (1865–1915)
  • Edward Bage – Australian polar explorer
  • Elizabeth Wallace – American writer
  • Elizabeth Fry – English social reformer (1780–1845)
  • Elizabeth Glover – English Proprietor of first printing press in the British colonies (1602–1643)
  • Elizabeth Cady Stanton – American suffragist (1815–1902)
  • Ellen Balaam – Australian physician (1891-1985)
  • Enid Derham – Australian poet and academic (1882–1941)
  • Ethel Osborne – Australian industrial hygienist and medical practitioner
  • Fay Marles – Australian public servant (1926–2024)
  • Felix Meyer – Swiss painter and engraver (1653–1713)
  • Flos Greig – Australian lawyer (1880–1958)
  • Frances Willard – American temperance activist and suffragist
  • Freda Bage – Australian biologist, university professor
  • Gladys Pott – English anti-suffragist and civil servant
  • Gladys Hain – Australian lawyer, activist and journalist (1887–1962)
  • Grace Turner – Fictional character from the American CBS soap opera The Young and the Restless
  • Harrison Moore – Australian legal scholar (1867-1935)
  • Helen Keller – American author and activist (1880–1968)
  • Helvi Sipila – Finnish politician, lawyer and diplomat (1915–2009)
  • Herbert Brookes – Businessman and philanthropist
  • Howard Hitchcock – Australian politician (1866–1932)
  • Indira Gandhi – Prime Minister of India from 1966 to 1977 and 1980 to 1984
  • Isabel McCorkindale – Australian temperance worker and women's activist (1885–1971)
  • James Booth – English actor (1927–2005)
  • Jean Arnot – Australian librarian, trade unionist and feminist
  • Jessie Street – Australian activist
  • Jessie Webb – Australian academic and historian
  • Jessie Henderson – Film and TV Executive
  • Joan Rosanove – Australian lawyer and advocate
  • John Downing
  • Josephine Butler – English feminist and social reformer (1828–1906)
  • Judith Lumley – Australian academic
  • Julia Rapke – Australian-Jewish women's rights activist and Justice of the Peace
  • Lucretia Mott – American Quaker abolitionist and suffragist (1793–1880)
  • Lyra Taylor – New Zealand lawyer and social worker
  • Margaret Windeyer – Australian librarian and feminist
  • Margaret Guilfoyle – Australian politician (1926–2020)
  • Mary Rogers – American murder victim
  • Mary Wollstonecraft – English writer and philosopher (1759–1797)
  • Mary Grant Bruce – Australian children's writer and journalist
  • Mary Page Stone – Australian medical doctor (1865–1910)
  • May Maxwell – American Baha'i
  • May Wright Sewall – American suffragist (1844–1920)
  • Myra Roper – British-born Australian educationalist, author, broadcaster and expert on China
  • Norman Harper – British writer
  • Robert Southey – English romantic poet (1774–1843)
  • Rose Scott – Australian suffragist (1847–1925)
  • Ruby Board – (1880-1963) voluntary welfare worker
  • Susan B. Anthony – American women's rights activist (1820–1906)
  • Susie Williams – Australian advocate for women's ordination, classical scholar and educationist (1875-1942)
  • Sybil Morrison – British pacifist and suffragette
  • Sybil Irving – Australian military officer (1897–1973)
  • Vance Palmer – Australian writer
  • Vera Scantlebury – Australian pediatrician (1889–1946)
  • Violet Teague – Australian artist (1872–1951)
  • Winifred Williams – Wife of Siegfried Wagner
  • Winifred Cullis – British physiologist (1875-1956)



extra

Vida book

  • Mrs Elizabeth Rennick - foundational member of VWSS
  • annette Bear crawford
  • hentietta dugdale
  • Annie Lowe

Descriptive

[edit]

Aust Feminist Movements

[edit]


Monuments

[edit]


Abortion

[edit]


International

[edit]


Champions of the Impossible

[edit]

Foundations

[edit]
  • The Princess Ida club

Inaugural Meeting

[edit]
  • Date: 19 March 1902
  • located at the Austral Salon
  • President: Janet Clarke
Thirty-five Organisations
[edit]
  1. Association of Domestic Economy
  2. Austral Salon
  3. Australian Church Social Improvement Society
  4. Australian Women's Association
  5. Bendigo Women's Literary Society
  6. Collingwood Creche
  7. Collingwood Girls' Club
  8. Collins Street Independent Church Ladies' Reading Society
  9. Convalescent Home for Women
  10. Daughters of the Court (Later known as 'Friends in Council) - Established by Louisa Jane Bevan
  11. Gentlewomen's Aid Society
  12. Hawthorn Ladies' Reading Society
  13. Hawthorn Progressive League
  14. Jewish Women's Guild
  15. Kew Progressive League
  16. Maternity Patients' Convalescent home
  17. Melbourne District Nursing Society
  18. Methodist Neglected Children's Aid Society
  19. Prahran Women's Progressive League
  20. Princess Ida Club
  21. Queen Victoria Hospital
  22. United Council for Women's Suffrage
  23. Victorian Alliance
  24. Victorian Infant Asylum and Foundling Hospital
  25. Victorian Lady Teachers' Association
  26. Victorian Women's Post and Telegraph Association
  27. Victorian Women's Public Service Association
  28. Victorian Women's Political League
  29. Women's Christian Temperance Union
  30. Women's Health Society
  31. Women's Hospital
  32. Women's Progressive League
  33. Writers' Club
  34. Young Women's Christian Association


Committee

  • President: Janet Lady Clarke
  • Vice-Presidents: Louisa Jane Bevan (Mrs L. D. Bevan) and Annie Lowe (Mrs Lowe)
  • Hon. Secretary: Sibyl Maud Cave nee Pinnock (Mrs Henry Cave) (of the Foundling Hospital)
  • Hon. Treasurer: Mrs Joseph Saddler
  • Anna Howie (Mrs Howie)
  • Mrs Walker
  • Mrs Evelyn Gough (with Catherine Hay Thomson, founded weekly journal The Sun: An Illustrated Journal for the Home and Society)
  • Mrs Watson Lyster
  • Mrs M. E. Kirk
  • Miss C.H. Thomson