- Augusta Zadow
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Christiane Susanne Augustine (Augusta) Zadow (née Hofmeyer) (27 August 1846 - 7 July 1896) was a German-Australian trade unionist.
Contents
Early years
She was born in Runkel in the Duchy of Nassau, she was educated at the Ladies' Seminary, Biebrich-on-Rhine, and following her studies became a governess. By 1868 she was working as a tailoress in London. She met her husband Christian Wilhelm Zadow, a tailor and political refugee from Germany, in London and the pair married in 1871 and travelled to Australia with their young son on the Robert Lees, arriving in Adelaide in 1877.
Union activities
In Adelaide, Zadow became an advocate for women working in clothing factories. She was a major contributor to the establishment of the Working Women's Trades Union in 1890 and was a delegate to the United Trades and Labour Council of South Australia. Mary Lee, David Charleston and Zadow prepared a list of fair wages and prices for use in Adelaide.
She spoke in favor of women's suffrage and following the franchise of women in South Australia in 1894, she was appointed a factory inspector by the government of Charles Kingston. She inspected factories and monitored working conditions for women and minors.
Personal life
She died of haematemesis following an illness from influenza in 1896 while preparing a report on the Factories Act. She was buried at the West Terrace Cemetery. The Augusta Zadow scholarship was formed in her honour in 1994. It is awarded annually to individuals involved in women's health and safety issues.[1]
References
- ^ "Augusta Zadow Scholarships - SafeWork SA". Government of South Australia. http://www.safework.sa.gov.au/show_page.jsp?id=8603. Retrieved 19 April 2010.
- Jones, H. Zadow, Christiane Susanne Augustine (Augusta) (1846–1896), Australian Dictionary of Biography, Volume 12, Melbourne University Press, 1990, p. 604.
Categories:- 1846 births
- 1896 deaths
- Australian suffragists
- Australian trade unionists
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