1834 to 1899
1834
- 19 November - first landing of white settlers and stock at Portland Bay (Victoria). It was an illegal venture transgressing both Aboriginal law and that of an ineffectual colonial government. The genocide began. The Gurnditch'mara, whose territory included Portland, had been in contact with whalers and sealers for at least thirty years. These visits, although damaging in terms of violence and introduced disease, had only been sporadic. page 74
1835
- 6 June - John Batman signed a cynical treaty with members of the Dutigalla - two hundred pounds worth of blankets and other goods and a promise of yearly rental worth the same amount. Claimed title over vast area of land. page 74
1836
- White settlement at Port Phillip (Melbourne) - by 1850 the settler population was 77,000. The Aborigines defended their land and the land had to be taken by force. The myth of peaceful annexation gave the excuse of tacit consent and thus no compensation. 'Racial theory and economic interest was the excuse for the uncompensated alienation of aboriginal land'. M.F. Christie, Aborigines in Colonial Victoria 1835-86, Sydney University Press, 1979, p.55) page 74
1851
- By now only areas in north-west Victoria and south-east Gippsland were not in white hands. Newspapers of the day attest the 'shoot them dead' attitudes and actions of the settlers of this period. The Protectorate system set up in 1839 was never supported by the general public. The colonists saw it as misplaced sentimentality and a waste of money. Aboriginal views were never canvassed. page 74
- Independence for Victoria. Reserve system introduced. Schools were set up to educate Aboriginal children 'away from the influence of their parents'. Thus began the kidnapping of children from their natural parents. The huge influx to the goldfields of the whites and shortage of labour gave some employment to the Aborigines but their condition continued to deteriorate due to the practice of paying with rum. page 74
1861
- Matrimonial Causes Act. This legislation discriminated heavily against women in divorce. For the divorce to be granted women had to prove repeated adultery on the part of the husband together with cruelty and desertion (men only had to prove one adultery against the wife.) page 9
1863
- Aboriginal population had dwindled from at least 11,500 in 1834 to fewer than 2000, (historian Noel Butlin claims that the population would have been between 50,000 to 100,000 before white contact with the aboriginals reduced the numbers - Our Original Aggression, 1983, largely through smallpox and venereal disease. page 74
- Victorian Local Government Act did not specifically exclude propertied women from voting in municipal elections. Under the electoral laws this automatically placed them on the colonial electoral roll, thus enfranchising them. This was repealed two years later when it was discovered that such a loophole existed in the Act. page 9
1869
- Aboriginal Protection Act legislatively enshrined the notion that Aborigines were socially children, incapable of determining their own futures. Men of the Coranderk Aboriginal Station were demanding wage payment for their labour and official tenure of the station. page 74
1869
- The first public demand for full citizenship rights for women was reported to have been made by Harriet Dugdale in a letter to the Melbourne 'Argus'. page 9
1871
- Young Women's Christian Association started in Victoria (Geelong). A christian women's association, its purpose was to provide opportunities for women to develop their full potential and concern for the community in responsible action, and to strive to achieve peace, justice and freedom for all people. page 9
1873
- The first Victorian Factory Act was passed, setting out minimum hours and conditions for women and juveniles. There were no provisions for policing these conditions. page 9
1880
- Women first admitted to lectures and examinations at the University of Melbourne. page 9
1881
- University Act gave women the right to be admitted to the University of Melbourne. page 9
1882
- Coranderrk Aborigines organised and took their complaints of bad health conditions; lack of real wages; the imposition of compulsory Christian education; punishment by withdrawal of rations through to the parliamentary system by deputations and petitions. page 75
- Melbourne Tailoresses' Union tailoress's strike against 'sweating (forcing women to work overtime by taking work home to complete). Land granted for a building for women unionists. page 10
1883
- Public Service Act (Victoria) laid down discriminatory regulations preventing women's promotion. Set up separate rolls for men and women teachers with women's salaries at four-fifths of the male rate. page 10
- Victorian Royal Commission on conditions of employees in shops established with particular reference to barmaids. page 10
- First woman graduate from an Australian University - Julia Bella Guerin, B.A. degree and M.A. degree in 1885, University of Melbourne. page 10
1884
- First woman to enrol as a medical student in Australia at Sydney University. Forced by the hostility of the male students to complete her degree in London. Her name was Dagmar Berne. page 10
- Married Woman's Property Act. Victorian legislation gave married women the right to own and dispose of property in their own right. page 10
- Victorian Women's Suffrage Society formed 22 June by Henrietta Dugdale and Annette Bear. The aims of the society were to obtain the same privileges for women as were possessed by male voters: i.e. equal justice; no taxation without representation; equal privileges in marriage and divorce; rights to property and the custody of children in divorce. It had 195 male and female members by 1885, 298 by 1886 but lost most of its force by the 1990's. page 10
- Victorian Lady Teacher's Association formed in December. It aimed to look at the situation of women engaged in primary teaching. It was formed by teachers who were indignant at the pitifully low rate of pay they received compared to the rates of male teachers. page 10
1884-85
- Amendment to Victorian Factory Act. Despite the Royal Commission in 1883, there was little change to the legislation. page 10
1886
- After much trouble and Aboriginal protest against the coercion practiced by managers and the Protection Board, a Royal Commission recommended that all Aborigines of mixed descent (except for young children) under the age of 34 be moved off the Reserves. Thus began the policy of assimilation which removed children from mothers without consent. page 75
- Aboriginal Protection Act amendment excluded all part Aborigines under the age of 34 years from Aboriginal Reserves. This meant that children were torn from their mothers, relatives and culture. page 10
1887
- Women's Christian Temperance Society formed 16 November. As well as opposing alcohol they were active in the struggle for the vote for women. The society was morally feminist and sought social reforms which included protecting the home and the making of one standard of morals for both sexes. Hostel opened for girls in 1892 in Spencer Street. A kindergarten in Richmond which included a school for mothers - the forerunner of Baby Health Centres - was opened in 1909. page 11
- 1888 First woman's newspaper, 'The Dawn' started by Louisa Lawson (mother of Henry Lawson, poet and novelist) employing all-female labour (NSW). First issue 15 May 1888. It continued for 17 years. page 11
1889
- The 'Dawn Club' was a 'Women's Reform Social Club' (NSW formed by Louise Lawson). page 11
- Australian Women's Suffrage Society formed. First annual report presented 1889.) Its aims were to educate women and men about women's right to vote. page 11
1890
- Order of the Daughters of the Court formed 24 October by the Rev. and Mrs W D Bevan. Its aim was to help women realize their influence and favoured women's emancipation. It covered intellectual, sporting and leisure interests. It did not support change based on arguments of sex rights. page 11
- Public Service Act No. 1133 Section 43, Victoria, made married women ineligible for appointment to the Public Service. Retirement compulsory on marriage (after passing of Act). Married women were retrenched during depression of 1890's and lost permancy rights of employment in the Public Service. page 11
- Matrimonial Causes Act added desertion, drunkedness, cruelty etc. and imprisonment as grounds for divorce but left the double standard of adultery (insanity included in 1919). page 12
- Australian Women's Franchise Society. Active in the 1890's. Its aim was to gain Parliamentary franchise for women. Participants included proffessional workers connected with the labour movement. The Committee (executive) included men and women. page 12
- First woman doctor to practice in Victoria. Dr Emma Constance Stone was refused admission to University of Melbourne so studied in USA, Canada and England. page 12
- Victorian Vigilance Society formed by Mrs Annette Bear-Crawford, Vida Goldstein and Constance Stone. It aimed to raise the age of consent from 14 years to 16 years. page 12
1890's
- Women first admitted to the Victorian Public Service as receptionists and clerks, but no for other grades. page 12
1891
- Womanhood Suffrage League founded in April by the Women's Christian Temperance Society. Its aim was to obtain parliamentary franchise for women on the same terms that it was given to men.
- Womanhood Suffrage League (NSW) formed by Rose Scott. page 12
- First women medical graduates from University of Melbourne: Clara Stone and Margaret Whyte page 12
- Women's Suffrage Petition with 30,000 signatures presented to Victorian Parliament by Women's Christian Tempernce Union, Victorian Temperence Alliance and the three Suffrage Societies. page 12
- Age of consent - Crimes (Sexual Offences) Act sets age at 16 (conduct cannot be condoned on the grounds that it was consented to by the child. page 12
1893
- First woman science graduate from University of Melbourne: Miss L. J. Little page 12
1894
- Labor Party included women's right to vote in their official platform. page 12
- Victorian Women's Suffrage Bill (Dr Maloney). page 51
- Women won the vote in South Australia. page 12
- National Society for Woman Suffrage. It aimed to gain women's enfranchisement and hoped to become a Central Committee but failed in this and later merged with the United Council for Woman Suffrage. page 13
- First Female Factory Inspector in Victoria and Australia - Margaret G Cuthbertson. page 13
1895-6
- Victorian Plural Voting Abolition and Women's Suffrage Bill (Mr G Turner) page 51
1896
- Factory Workrooms and Shops Act granted Royal Assent on 29 July. It set minimum conditions and brought in registration of outworkers, appointed inspectors and set up the Special (wages) Board (Royal Assent 29 July 1896). page 13
1898
- Women's Social and Political Crusade - aims included measures to provide: a Deceased Husbands's Brother Bill (to permit marriage in such circumstances); public lavatories for women; a septicaemia ward at the Women's Hospital and children's playgrounds. page 13
1899
- Queen Victoria Hospital opened in Little Lonsdale Street. It was the first womne's hospital in Australia run by women for women. Money had been raised in 1897 by an appeal to every woman in Victoria to donate one shilling and three thousand one hundred and sixty two pounds eleven shillings and ninepence was raised. This appeal was held in connection with the Queen Victoria Diamond Jubilee celebration. In 1946 the hospital moved to Lonsdale Street. page 13
- United Council for Woman
Suffrage re-formed. Originally formed in 1894, it was ineffective
by the year 1899. Its aims were: to coordinate and amalgamate suffrage
societies and to lobby members of parliament and municipal councillors
abourt women's suffrage; to educate the public about women's suffrage;
to educate the public about women's suffrage; to educate the public about
women's suffrage and to train women speakers to address meetings.
Those involved included representatives from suffrage societies, Women's Christian Temperance Union, Trades Hall, Vigilance Society and Annette Bear-Crawford. The Council formed the Women's Progressive League. page 14 - Women won the vote in Western Australia.
- Victorian Women's Suffrage Bill (Sir George Turner). page 51