Grace Emily Munro | |
---|---|
![]() Grace Emily Munro, founder of Country Women's Association of Australia, 10 April 1922. | |
Born | Grace Emily Gordon March 25, 1879 Warialda, New South Wales, Australia |
Died | July 23, 1964 85) Sydney, New South Wales, Australia | (aged
Occupation | Charity worker |
Notable work | Founder of the Country Women's Association |
Grace Emily Munro ( née Gordon, 25 March 1879 – 23 July 1964) was an Australian World War One volunteer, charity worker, and founder of the Country Women's Association. [1]
Grace Emily Gordon was born on 25 March 1879 in Warialda, New South Wales, Australia, [2] as the second of George Hollinworth Gordon's seven daughters. She received her education from a governess at Kambala, Sydney. [2] Grace was an accomplished horsewoman, an exceptional needlewoman, and a knowledgeable gardener. [3]
Living mostly in Bellevue Hill during World War One, [2] Munro held the position of Honorary Organizing Secretary of the Australian Army Medical Corps and worked for the Australian Red Cross Society. [4] During the war, she became qualified in first aid, home nursing, and hygiene at St. John Ambulance Association under the training of Sister A. B. Perry. [2] Munro helped organise facilities at the Sydney Showground for country volunteers and ran the post office there. [2] She was also responsible for transporting the weekly supplies to army camps around Liverpool. [2]
In 1922, Munro held the first Country Women's Association (CWA) conference over three days during the Sydney Royal Easter Show and was subsequently elected as its president. [4] She travelled throughout New South Wales and Queensland to help form branches of the association. [2] By 1923, sixty-eight branches, seventeen restrooms for mothers and children, two seaside homes, and maternity centres in many towns had been established. [2] She helped found a rest-room in Bingara in 1924 as well as the first country baby health centre in Moree. [4] By 1926, when she retired due to illness, there were 100 CWA branches with a membership of 4,500. [2]
Munro gave first aid classes after the war [4] and was appointed a serving sister of the Order of St John of Jerusalem. In 1938, she was a member of the advisory board of New England University College at Armidale. [2] She also became a member of Bingara Hospital Board [2] and was the first woman to serve on a hospital board in rural NSW. [4] Munro raised large sums of money for rest centres and holiday homes, which include the Australian Inland Mission's Aerial Medical Service, and the Red Cross and St John. Munro met with cabinet ministers to establish maternity wards in country hospitals and improved conditions in trains with railway refreshments rooms for women and children. [2]
On 14 July 1898, Grace married 36-year-old Hugh Robert Munro of Keera station and they had three children together. [3] Her youngest child died in 1911 while Grace was away in Sydney with another child who was having an emergency appendectomy. Because of this experience, Munro became determined to improve the conditions of and the availability of medical help for all women and children in the country. [3]
Between 1911 and 1914 she travelled to cope with the loss of her child. She stayed with Hubert Murray in Papua New Guinea and sailed with him on his yacht to the Trobriand Islands and Fly River. She visited Tonga, Samoa, Fiji, Egypt, Europe, Kashmir, India, Burma, China, Japan, the Philippines, the Dutch East Indies, North America, South Africa, and the UK. [2]
In 1928, she accompanied Brigadier General E A Wilson on his annual trip to Papua New Guinea's Sepik River. From 1952 onward, she made annual trips to the Great Barrier Reef and developed a large shell collection. [2] In 1935, Munro received an O.B.E. [5] The following year, she moved out of Keera and started developing properties in Scone and Bundara, and houses in Sydney's Eastern Suburbs. [2]
Munro died in Sydney on 23 July 1964, aged 85, after suffering from a severe curvature of the spine. Her ashes were scattered over Keera. [2]
In November 2023 it was announced that Munro was one of eight women chosen to be commemorated in the second round of blue plaques sponsored by the Government of New South Wales alongside Kathleen Butler, godmother of Sydney Harbour Bridge; Emma Jane Callaghan, an Aboriginal midwife and activist; Susan Katherina Schardt; journalist Dorothy Drain; Pearl Mary Gibbs, an Aboriginal rights movement activist; and writer Charmian Clift. [6] [7]
Ravenswood School for Girls is an independent, Uniting Church, day and boarding school for Prep to Year 12 girls, situated in Gordon, an Upper North Shore suburb of Sydney, New South Wales, Australia.
Sir William Dobell was an Australian portrait and landscape artist of the 20th century. Dobell won the Archibald Prize, Australia's premier award for portrait artists on three occasions. The Dobell Prize is named in his honour.
Charmian Clift was an Australian writer. She was the second wife and literary collaborator of George Johnston.
Pymble Ladies' College is an independent, non-selective, day and boarding school for girls, located in Pymble, a suburb on the Upper North Shore of Sydney, New South Wales, Australia.
Pearl Mary "Gambanyi" Gibbs was an Indigenous Australian activist, and the most prominent female activist within the Aboriginal movement in the early 20th century. She was a member of the Aborigines Progressive Association (APA), and was involved with various protest events such as the 1938 Day of Mourning. She has strong associations with activists Jessie Street and Faith Bandler.
The Country Women's Association (CWA) is a women's organisation in Australia, which seeks to advances interests of women, families, and communities in Australia, especially those in rural, regional, and remote areas.
Dame Alice Miriam Berry was an Australian activist dedicated to finding ways to improve the lives of women and children in rural areas.
Allan Macpherson was a squatter, pastoralist and politician in the colony of New South Wales, a member of the Legislative Assembly.
Ruth Beatrice Fairfax was a founding member of the Australian Country Women's Association and the first President of the Queensland Country Women's Association. The federal electorate of Fairfax is named in her honour.
Thelma Florence Bate CBE was an Australian community leader and women's activist.
Ada Beveridge MBE, néeBeardmore was an Australian Country Women's Association leader.
Agnes Marion McLean Walsh was head matron of King Edward Memorial Hospital, a Western Australian maternity hospital from 1922 until her retirement in December 1954, during which time more than 60,000 babies were born under her supervision. In that capacity she advised the Commonwealth Government on midwifery policy and was on the National Medical Research Council.
Dorothy Dickson Ross was an Australian farmer and women's and rural activist who was the first national president of the Country Women's Association.
Elsie Jean Dalyell was an Australian medical doctor who specialised in pathology. During World War I, she served in the Royal Army Medical Corps across Europe, and was appointed an Officer of Order of the British Empire upon the conclusion of the war. In 1927 she co-founded a veneral disease clinic.
Susan Schardt was an Australian philanthropist who founded an organization to provide care for poverty-stricken people with incurable conditions who had been discharged from the hospital. Canvassing the state to raise funds, she founded the Commonwealth Home for Destitute Invalids in Ryde, New South Wales to offer services to a larger number of patients.
Emma Jane Callaghan was an Australian Aboriginal midwife, Indigenous rights/ activist supporter, nurse and Indigenous Culture Recorder.
Emma McPherson, also known as Mrs Allan Macpherson, was a writer and watercolour artist, was the daughter of Charles Henry Blake and his wife Frances.
Dorothy Drain was an Australian journalist, columnist, war correspondent, editor and poet. She worked as a journalist with The Australian Women's Weekly for 38 years, with the final five years being as its editor. She was "one of Australia's best-known journalists".
Keera is a locality on the upper Gwydir River in Murchison County in the New England region of New South Wales, Australia. The nearest town is Bingara which is approximately 20km to the north-west.
Edna Mary Anna Jane Shaw OBE was an Australian hospital matron. She was called the "Mother of 100,000 babies".