The Edgeworth David Women

Author(s): Jennifer Horsfield

Fiction

Cara David was an orphan from a working-class background in England, who gained a scholarship to train as a teacher in London. Her drive and intelligence saw her become a lecturer at the prestigious Whitelands College, from where she was appointed by Sir Henry Parkes as founding principal of the new Hurlstone Women's Training School in Sydney. She met her future husband, the young mining surveyor Edgeworth David, on the voyage to NSW in 1882. The Davids became involved with a group of liberal intellectuals who dominated Sydney's cultural life between the 1890s and the Great War, all sharing a passion for education, social and legal reform and the advancement of women. Cara David was to make her mark as a supporter of women's emancipation in the home and the workplace. She led the successful temperance campaign in NSW in 1915, one of the first examples of women using their voting power to influence legislation. Cara's two daughters both became resourceful women in their own right. The elder daughter, Margaret, became an independent politician and community activist until her tragically early death in a plane crash.
Molly, the younger daughter, became a respected author and environmentalist.

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Product Information

General Fields

  • : 9781921719516
  • : Rosenberg Publishing
  • : Rosenberg Publishing
  • : 31 January 2012
  • : 225mm X 150mm
  • : Australia
  • : 01 March 2012
  • : books

Special Fields

  • : Jennifer Horsfield
  • : Paperback
  • : 994.03092
  • : 304
  • : 50 b/w illus