Freda Whitlam

Freda Leslie Whitlam AM (11 September 1920 – 30 May 2018), was an Australian educator and feminist. Whitlam was a leader in the Uniting Church. She is best known for her work as the principal of the Presbyterian Ladies' College (PLC), at Croydon in inner-west Sydney, where she worked for 18 years.

Biography

Whitlam was born in Mosman on 11 September 1920 and is the sister of Prime Minister, Gough Whitlam.[1][2][3] In 1927, she and her family moved to Canberra.[3] Whitlam attended Canberra Girls Grammar School.[4] She studied at Abbotsleigh and Canberra University College.[5][3] During World War II, she served with the WAAAF, joining in 1943.[4][3] After the war, she earned a Bachelor of Arts from Melbourne University.[3] Whitlam went on to teach French in Canberra and learned Latin and Esperanto.[3] In 1954, she earned a Fulbright Scholarship to study at Yale.[5] She earned her master's degree there in 1955 and then went on to take further studies at London University.[2][3]

Whitlam became the new principal of the Presbyterian Ladies' College (PLC) starting in 1958.[4] Whitlam resigned from the school in 1976, citing political issues between herself and the school's council as the reason for her early retirement.[6]

In 1977, a Union of the Congregational, Methodist and Presbyterian churches took place, forming the Uniting Church in Australia. Approximately one-third of the Presbyterian Church decided to remain Presbyterian, and consequently the property of the church had to be divided. In May of that year it was announced that PLC Croydon was to remain Presbyterian and PLC Pymble would be transferred, with its name changed to Pymble Ladies' College. Then in 1978 it was decided that PLC Croydon should return to its original name: Presbyterian Ladies' College, Sydney.[7] Freda Whitlam took part in the movement to form the Uniting Church and thus ended her principalship of the school. She was appointed moderator of the New South Wales Synod of the Uniting Church in Australia in 1985 and served in that role until 1986.[8][9] In 1986, she told The Sydney Morning Herald that she identifies as a feminist.[8] Whitlam was made a Member of the Order of Australia (AM) in the 1987 Australia Day Honours for "service to education and to the community".[10] She was involved in drug reform in 1993, where she signed onto a charter to abolish criminal sanctions for personal illegal drug use.

In 1999, Whitlam was awarded an honorary doctorate of letters from the University of Western Sydney.[2] PLC named their school of science after her in 1998.[11] She continued to teach Latin well into her nineties.[12] Whitlam died in a nursing home in Penrith on 30 May 2018.[12]

gollark: So the general and robust fix for this would be to stop doing I/O this way for anything but performance-sensitive and fairly robust (terminal, FS) I/O and API stuff, but PotatOS has so much legacy code that that would actually be very hard.
gollark: As it turns out, you can take a perfectly safe function with out of sandbox access and make it very not safe by controlling what responses it gets from HTTP requests and whatever.
gollark: And *another* Lua quirk more particular to CC is a heavy emphasis on event-driven I/O via coroutines.
gollark: The FS layer is actually fine, probably, apart from insufficiently flexible filesystem virtualization; the issue is that since this is really easy, many other potatOS features interact this way.
gollark: I *also* had to patch over a bunch of debug stuff to make sure that unprivileged code can't read environments out of those too.

References

  1. Stephens, Tony (5 October 1991). "Why a Whitlam Joined the Fight". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 2018-08-29 via Newspapers.com.
  2. Stephens, Tony (2 October 1999). "A Tireless Advocate Gets Just Reward". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 2018-08-29 via Newspapers.com.
  3. Stephens, Tony (1 June 2018). "Freda Whitlam: educationalist passionate about her girls". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 2018-09-01.
  4. "Croydon P.L.C.'s New Head". The Sydney Morning Herald. 4 September 1957. Retrieved 2018-08-29 via Newspapers.com.
  5. "Teachers on Fulbright Scholarships". The Sydney Morning Herald. 15 September 1954. Retrieved 2018-08-29 via Newspapers.com.
  6. "Whitlam's Sister Tells Why She Quit". The Sydney Morning Herald. 31 December 1976. Retrieved 2018-08-29 via Newspapers.com.
  7. McFarlane, John (1988). "Preparation For Expansion 1977-1985". The Golden Hope: Presbyterian Ladies' College, Sydney 1888-1988. p. 129.
  8. Simpkins, Kate (11 September 1986). "Freda Whitlam is a Kind of Archbishop". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 2018-08-29 via Newspapers.com.
  9. Brolly, Mark (29 January 1990). "For this Whitlam, A Quieter Life of Service". The Age. Retrieved 2018-08-29 via Newspapers.com.
  10. "Australia Day honours". Canberra Times (ACT : 1926 - 1995). 26 January 1987. p. 6. Retrieved 2018-10-28.
  11. Jarvis, Danielle (14 June 2018). "Freda Whitlam remembered in touching memorial in Penrith". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 1 September 2018.
  12. Pryor, Sally (1 June 2018). "Freda Whitlam, sister of Gough, dead at 97". Canberra Times. Retrieved 2018-09-01.

Further reading

Martin, Noelene (2008). Freda: A biography of Freda Whitlam. Noelene Martin. ISBN 978-0-646-50463-6.

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