Edith Cowan

@Social Campaigner, Timeline and Facts

Edith Dircksey Cowan (née Brown) was an Australian politician and social campaigner

Aug 2, 1861

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Biography

Personal Details

  • Birthday: August 2, 1861
  • Died on: June 9, 1932
  • Nationality: Australian
  • Famous: Social Campaigner, Activists, Civil Rights Activists, Children's Rights Activists, Human Rights Activists, Political Activists, Women's Rights Activists
  • Spouses: James Cowan
  • Known as: Edith Dircksey Cowan
  • Childrens: Dircksey Constance, Helen May Burdett, Hilda Edith, Ida Marion, Norman Walkinshaw

Edith Cowan born at

Geraldton, Western Australia

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Birth Place

In 1879 Edith married James Cowan, who was at that time the Registrar and the Master of the Supreme Court in Perth. The boarding school, where seven year old Edith was enrolled after her mother’s death, was run by James’ sisters, Miss Cowan.

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Personal Life

The Cowans had five children - Dircksey Constance,Norman Walkinshaw, Hilda Edith, Ida Marion and Helen May Burdett. All the children, including the four girls, were given proper education and were taught to be independent.

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Personal Life

Cowan died on 9 June, 1932 at Perth and was buried in the Karakatta Cemetery in the suburbs of Perth. She was seventy-one-year-old.

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Personal Life

Edith was born August 2, 1861 in Glengarry, close to the coastal city of Geraldton in Western Australia. Her father, Kenneth Brown, was the oldest son of early settler and well-known politician Thomas Brown. He himself was a noted explorer and pastoralist.

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Childhood & Early Life

Edith’s mother, Mary Eliza Dircksey was a teacher by profession. The couple had four surviving children, among which Edith was born second. Her three siblings were Blanche, Forrest and Clarence. Mary Eliza died while giving birth to their fifth child and Edith was just seven.

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Childhood & Early Life

Unable to look after her, her father, Kenneth sent her to a boarding school at Perth. Incidentally, the school was run by Cowan sisters and one day Edith would marry their brother James.

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Childhood & Early Life

Subsequently, Kenneth married Mary Ann Tindal. Edith had two stepsisters, Rose and Amy, from this union. Soon after his marriage Kenneth began to lose money and took to drinking. There was constant bickering between the two and in January 1876, in a fit of anger, he shot Mary Ann to death.

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Childhood & Early Life

Subsequently, Kenneth was tried and hanged to death for willful murder. Fifteen-year-old Edith was then taken out of the boarding school and put under the care of her maternal grandmother at Guildford. Here she was educated under Canon Sweeting, who instilled in her the value of education.

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Childhood & Early Life

Edith began her public life in 1890. Her husband was by then a Police Magistrate at Perth. The posting provided her with an insight into the social and legal problems faced by the society at large. She was especially concerned about the injustice meted out to the women and children.

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Public Life

Edith began by joining St. George’s Reading Circle, a women’s group established with the aim of exchanging reading materials and debating current affairs. In 1891, she started working for Ministering Children's League and in 1893 she got associated with House of Mercy, a home for unwed mothers.

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Public Life

In 1894, the members of the St. George’s Reading Circle formed Karrakatta Club, a women’s organization modeled after the Education Clubs of the U.S.A and Edith Cowan became its first secretary. Later from 1910 to 1912, she served as the club President. From the very beginning Edith took an active role in administering the club. She suggested ‘Spectemur Agendo’ (Let us be judged by our actions) as its motto. Under her, the club became involved in women’s suffrage. Ultimately the right to vote was achieved in 1899.

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Public Life

Edith next turned her attention to welfare issues. She was especially concerned about sufferings of prostitutes and children. Women’s health and education were also some other major issues, which concerned her greatly. She soon began to speak publicly about such matters.

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Public Life

As a state education advocate, she served several terms on the North Fremantle Board of Education. When in 1906, the Children's Protection Society was formed she became one of its founding members and helped to bring about State Children Act 1907.

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Public Life

All her life, Edith Cowan worked for the welfare of the women and children. Nonetheless, winning the voting right for women in 1899 was probably her first major work. Later she played a major role in setting up the children’s court because she believed children should not be tried with adults.

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Major Work

As a member of the legislative assembly, Cowan campaigned for sex education at school, children’s nurseries for working women and housewives’ union. In 1923, she pushed through ‘Women’s Legal Status Bill’, which not only allowed women to take up legal career but also opened the door of other professions.

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Major Work