Emily Bennett
Emily Bennett born Emily McNamarra (29 January 1871 โ 10 May 1941) was an Australian feminist and political organiser. She was the "best feminist" that Jessie Street knew.
Emily Bennett | |
---|---|
Born | Emily McNamarra 29 January 1871 Camperdown, New South Wales, Australia |
Died | 10 May 1941 70) Manly, New South Wales, Australia | (aged
Nationality | Australian |
Occupation | activist |
Spouse | Francis Bennett |
Children | one |
Life
Bennett was born in the Sydney suburb of Camperdown in 1871. She was the ninth child born to Mary Elizabeth (born Green) and Denis McNamarra. She married Francis Andrew Bennett in a Catholic ceremony on 11 April 1894. He was a widower with three children who lived in Cootamundra. In the following year their only child was born. Her husband was an auctioneer, and In 1902, 1903 and 1907 served as the mayor of Singleton. She moved back to Sydney after he died in 1913.[1]
She was a supporter of Laura Bogue Luffman who was a leading right-wing figure of the Women's Reform League of New South Wales[2] and in 1921 Bennett became its organising secretary.[1] She set herself the target of getting 100,000 women interested in politics as she believed that women were now empowered to achieve. She herself supported the Progressive Party but she wanted the league's women to join influential organisations like the League of Nations Union and the National Council of Women of Australia.[1]
The 9th Conference of the International Woman Suffrage Alliance in Rome has been referred to as the biggest conference of women's suffrage ever.[3] Bessie Rischbieth led an Australian delegation to the conference and Bennett was one of the ten delegates. The photograph of the delegation shows her and the other delegates. She is standing behind Rischbieth. She met Benito Mussolini and they were invited to events organised by Eric Drummond, 7th Earl of Perth (the British ambassador) and another by Pius XI. She met Chrystal Macmillan when she joined a committee looking at how British citizens lost their rights if they married a man who was not British. Bennett went on to London where her belief in the power of women within the British Empire was confirmed. She stayed in England for months.[1]
In 1932 Rischbieth organised a celebration of Bennett's contribution to Australian women's rights. The trigger was that Bennett had lost her savings when a bank had failed.[1] The event was well attended and Mrs Kenneth Street (sic) was quoted as saying that Bennett was "the best feminist I know". Bennett, as guest of honour, was given wide thanks and a cheque.[4]
References
- Roe, Jill, "Bennett, Emily (1871โ1941)", Australian Dictionary of Biography, Canberra: National Centre of Biography, Australian National University, retrieved 16 September 2023
- Bettison, Margaret, "Luffman, Lauretta Caroline Maria (1846โ1929)", Australian Dictionary of Biography, Canberra: National Centre of Biography, Australian National University, retrieved 6 December 2021
- Siegel, M. L. (2020). Peace on Our Terms: The Global Battle for Women's Rights After the First World War. USA: Columbia University Press.
- "MRS. EMILY BENNETT". Sydney Morning Herald. 24 June 1932. Retrieved 16 September 2023.