Ellen Webster

Ellen Webster (14 October 1881 20 October 1965) was an Australian politician.

Life and career

Born in Tenterfield in New South Wales to Irish immigrant parents (she was the sixth child of hawker Phillip Callachor and his wife Mary Fitzgerald), she was raised on the family property and educated at home. She later claimed to have studied medicine at the University of Sydney, but this was never proved. By 1920 she was living in Randwick, and she was married on 26 July 1921 to William Maule McDowell Webster at St Patrick's Catholic Church in Sydney. After their marriage, the Websters moved to a farming property at Arcot near Forbes.[1]

From 1927 to 1929 she was a member of the Labor Party central executive, and was delegate to various country conferences. On 26 November 1931 she was appointed to the New South Wales Legislative Council by Premier Jack Lang, joining Catherine Green, appointed two days earlier, as the first women in the Council. She remained in the Council until 22 April 1934.[1]

After the death of her husband in 1958, Webster ran the family property until the 1960s, when she moved to Sydney to live with her nephew. She died in 1965 and was buried in Randwick Cemetery.[1]

gollark: Also stuff like birth control.
gollark: Which is I think negatively correlated with child quantity.
gollark: Depending on how broadly you define "infertility" that actually applies to things like economic development.
gollark: As they say, "bees rotate at a minimum of 0.002 radians per second".
gollark: Lots of ethical philosophy stuff *does* actually consider intentions.

References

  1. "Mrs Ellen Webster (1881-1965)". Former Members of the Parliament of New South Wales. Retrieved 13 May 2019.
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