Cecily Maude O'Connell

Cecily Maude O'Connell (30 June 1884 – 13 December 1965) was an Australian trade unionist and religious social worker.

Cecily Maude O'Connell
Born30 June 1884
Beaufort, Victoria, Australia
Died13 December 1965
Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
NationalityAustralian

Biography

She was born Cecily Maude Mary O'Connell to Patrick Martin O'Connell and Rosina, née Hosking on 30 June 1884 at Beaufort, Victoria. Her father was a storekeeper and a cousin of Archbishop Daniel Mannix. The family initially lived in Beaufort before moving to Kilmore via Bairnsdale and Walhalla. It was in Kilmore where Rosina O'Connell died and as a result O'Connell was sent to Abbotsford, Melbourne. She began to work as a teacher and got involved with the social work done by Sister M. Bernardine of St Vincent's Hospital and Sister M. Monica of the Good Shepherd Sisters. When she spent time working in a Tobacco factory O'Connell became a trade union activist and worked with the Labour Party. O'Connell represented the tobacco workers on the Trades Hall Council and at Political Labor Council conferences in 1915–16. About this time she turned down a position working for the British-Australasian Tobacco Company.[1][2][3][4]

Despite being a supporter of the Labour Party, O'Connell argued for state aid to go to independent schools. She was the first first treasurer for the Catholic Women's Social Guild (Catholic Women's League) when it was founded in 1916. She worked to ensure women who were unemployed because of strikes had a place to stay. O'Connell worked as a nurse, training at the Eye and Ear Hospital and working during the 1919 flu epidemic. When she was 46 years old she founded the Company of Our Lady of the Blessed Sacrament, also known as the Grey Sisters, in Kewn Kreestha house in Daylesford, Victoria. The house opened in 1930. The purpose of the organisation was to care for mothers and children. Mothers were able to rest in the house while their children were minded. The depression challenged the women working with the Grey Sisters. They provided cleaning, cooking, shopping and child care services for families with an ill mother or new baby. O'Connell assisted Muriel Heagney to begin the Unemployed Girls' Relief Movement. The Grey Sisters became a religious congregation in 1949. O'Connell died on 13 December 1965. Before she died the Grey Sisters had opened houses in Prahran, Surrey Hills, Canterbury and Croydon. The Company of Our Lady of the Blessed Sacrament has since 1986 been known as the Family Care Sisters (the Grey Sisters).[1][5][3][2][4][6]

References and sources

  1. Kane, Kathleen Dunlop (1915-04-28). "Cecily Maude O'Connell - Australian Dictionary of Biography". Biography. Retrieved 2020-03-27.
  2. The University of Melbourne (2013-11-20). "Resource Section - O'Connell, Cecily Maude (1884-1965) - The Encyclopedia of Women and Leadership in Twentieth-Century Australia". The Australian Women's Register. Retrieved 2020-03-27.
  3. "Maude O'Connell and 'the need of the mother'" (PDF). School of History and Philosophy,.CS1 maint: extra punctuation (link)
  4. "The Catholic Church" (PDF).
  5. "Sr Cecily Maude O'Connell (Onbekend-1965) -..." Find a Grave-gedenkplek (in Dutch). 1965-12-13. Retrieved 2020-03-27.
  6. "Child Sexual Abuse in the Catholic Church" (PDF).
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