Jessie Vasey

Jessie Vasey

Jessie Mary Vasey CBE (19 October 1897 – 22 September 1966) was the founder and President of the War Widows' Guild of Australia.

Early life

Jessie Mary Vasey was born on 19 October 1897 in Roma, Queensland, the eldest of three daughters of Joseph Halbert, a farmer and grazier, and his wife Jessie, née Dobbin. Young Jessie attended Moreton Bay Girls' High School. The family moved to Victoria in 1911, where Jessie attended Lauriston Girls' School.harvnb|Damousi|2002] In 1913, she became a border at the Methodist Ladies' College, Melbourne (MLC).harvnb|Horner|1992|p=23] Jessie continued her education at the University of Melbourne living at Trinity College Hostel. She graduated with a Bachelor of Arts with First Class Honours in April 1921.

While at MLC, Jessie became friends with a fellow boarder, Marjorie Vasey, although the latter was seven years her junior. Later the Halbert family moved to Kew, just around the corner from the Vasey family. On 17 May 1921, she married Marjorie's brother, George Alan Vasey, an Australian Army major at St Matthew's Church of England, Glenroy, Victoria. (Like his family, she called him by his middle name.) When a friend asked Alan how he was going to get on married to a blue stocking, he replied "Don't worry - I'll soon have the blue stocking off her".

Army Wife

Alan and Jessie bought a house in Kew with a War Service Loan. Their first child, a son called George Halbert Vasey was born on 31 January 1925. [harvnb|Horner|1992|p=24] A second son, Robert Alan, was born in 1932. Alan's military career was stagnant, and he remained a major for twenty years. It also forced a number of moves, and the family resided in India from 1928 to 1929 while Alan attended the Staff College at Quetta and again from 1934 from 1937 while he was on exchange with the British Indian Army. The Vaseys sold their house in Kew and Jessie even sold some of the period furniture that had been a wedding gift from her father to pay for expenses involved in the second posting to India.harvnb|Horner|1992|p=29]

After Alan was posted back to Melbourne in 1938, they bought a 5.65 Ha property at Wantirna, which they named 'Tiltargara', where they intended to retire. The house was a white weatherboard cottage with a wood stove and no sewage or electricity, requiring kerosene lamps but probably all that they could afford. Alan commuted to Army Headquarters at Victoria Barracks by bus.

Alan sailed for the Middle East in December 1939 as commander of the advance party of the division. Jessie became involved in the Australian Comforts Fund. In May 1940, she became secretary of the AIF Women's Association, a body which sought to help soldiers' wives. [harvnb|Hilton|1989|p=46] Her work with this body drew her attention to the plight of war widows. In a society built around couples, they were single, having lost not only their husbands but also their social status. As such, they were often rejected by their married female friends. Many found themselves facing the awesome responsibility of raising children without fathers. Some found themselves faced with having to make decisions independently for the first time in their lives. They also faced real financial hardships and a cold and seemingly uncaring government bureaucracy. [harvnb|Smith|1984|p=9]

Alan was supportive of this work. "They come to me... time and time Jess," he told her in 1945, "especially before a show, and say: 'Sir, if anything happens to me you'll see that my wife and kids are all right?' And I tell them... yes, you know bloody well I will." [harvnb|Horner|1992|pp=320-321]

On 5 March 1945 - just a few days later - Alan was killed in an air crash near Cairns and Jessie became a war widow herself.

War Widow

Quote box
align=right
width=35%
quote=Men have always loved women, much as ogres have loved little children, for their own personal consumption
source=Jessie Vasey [harvnb|Smith|1984|p=9] |

In October 1945 Vasey sent a letter to all Victorian war widows proposing the formation of a craft guild. Weaving was chosen as there was a post-war textile shortage and it be undertaken in the home while children were at school or asleep. Money earned would supplement the niggardly pensions of the war widows.harvnb|Smith|1984|p=10]

Some 300 war widows showed up for an inaugural meeting. A constitution was drawn up and office holders were elected, with Vasey being elected the first president. The War Widows' Craft Guild officially came into existence on 21 January 1946. The AIF Women's Association provide space in its building in Collins Street, Melbourne and the Australian Red Cross opened a nursery nearby for war widows' children.

Vasey travelled around Australia organising guilds in other states. The Guild was established in New South Wales in June 1946, [ [http://www.warwidowsnsw.com.au/About_the_Guild/Origins_of_the_Guild.htm War Widows' Guild of Australia NSW Ltd] ] and by early 1947 there were Guilds in every state. This enabled the formation of a federal organisation, with clubs operating at the local level, autonomous state branches, and a national council for liaising with the Commonwealth government and federal organisations, such as the Returned and Services League of Australia. Vasey was elected founding president of the new national organisation at its first conference in 1947.

Vasey set out to obtain an increase in the War Widow's pension. This had originally been introduced during the Great War. A review of pensions in 1920 had set the war widow's pension at £1/2 per week at a time when the basic wage was £3/13 a week. Although war widows were fortunate to avoid a pension cut during the Great Depression, the pension remained unchanged until 1943, when it became £2/10 a week. By this time post-war inflation had eaten away much of its value, leaving many war widows in financial hardship. Vasey resolved that the war widow's pension should be raised to the basic wage, which by 1947 was £5/9 per week.harvnb|Smith|1984|p=11]

There were also some anomalies in the pension structure. For example, a serviceman was paid an allowance of 21/6 for the first child and 17/6 for the second; but if he died, the orphan's allowance was just 17/6 and 12/6 respectively. [harvnb|Clark|1986|p=2]

There was a stigma associated with collecting the pension. "They gave you this £2/10, and you had to go to the post office and get the money handed to you over the counter. And if they were busy at the post office they'd say, 'Just stand aside.'" [cite episode| title = War widows commemorate milestone| series = 7:30 Report| serieslink = 7:30 Report| airdate = 2005-10-24| url = http://www.abc.net.au/7.30/content/2005/s1489666.htm| accessdate = 2008-04-06] Vasey argued that the pension was not charity but a statutory right, being compensation for the life of a serviceman. Vasey's attitude would bring her into conflict with charitable groups like Legacy Australia.harvnb|Smith|1984|p=12]

Quote box
align=right
width=35%
quote=The era of the dependent female is passing (a humiliating description of the wife and mother). Married women had a taste of economic freedom during the war and they are not going to forget it lightly...
source=Jessie Vasey|
In May 1947, the government announced an increase in the widow's pension of 5s per week, but this fell far short of what Vasey was asking for. An ill-timed increase in parliamentary salaries help mobilise public opinion and Vasey held lunchtime rally at Melbourne Town Hall that attracted over 3,000 war widows.

As a result, the Minister for Repatriation, Claude Barnard, agreed to meet with representative of the War Widows' Guild. But while he was prepared to discuss anomalies in the educational and medical benefits to which war widows might be entitled, and to look at the situation of widows with children, he remained unmoved on the question of an increase in pension be paid to childless widows.

Barnard was reported as saying that:

The Prime Minister, Ben Chifley attempted to defuse the situation by claiming that Barnard had been misunderstood. He refused to budge on the basic wage, but granted some concessions: war widows with Tuberculosis were granted treatment in repatriation hospitals, and accrued leave owed to deceased soldiers was paid to to their widows. The campaign to bring the war widows' pension into line with the basic wage would continue for many years.

Quote box
align=right
width=35%
quote=If a woman is fond of her children and brings them up all right, then I don't care if she sleeps with ten men a night.
source=Jessie Vaseyharvnb|Smith|1984|p=13] |
Perhaps the most controversial clause in the Repatriation Act was Section 43 which stated that a pension could be refused or terminated if the Board felt that the grant or continuance was undesirable. Any widow who remarried could expect to have her pension terminated. Section 43 was wielded as a morality clause against those found to be living in sin. Any widow suspected of having an affair was liable to have her pension terminated. To Vasey, this was an intolerable intrusion on the privacy of war widows, stripping them of their dignity. Vasey and Barnard publicly clashed over the issue between May and September 1949 and the offending clause was ultimately removed from the act.

In 1949, Vasey embarked on her most controversial campaign, to provide housing for elderly war widows. Starting with a £5,000 donation from Sir William Angliss and the proceeds from raffling a car, she obtained a loan to purchase a property. The scheme grew from there. In 1954, the government offered to match pound for pound money spent by voluntary agencies on housing for the elderly, a subsidy which was doubled in 1958. The War Widows' Guild formed a subsidy, Vasey Housing, with Vasey as its managing director. By 1965 it was housing 250 widows in Victoria alone.harvnb|Smith|1984|p=14]

Conflict over the scheme arose from the considerably different needs of the elderly widows of previous wars and of the younger, more recent war widows. This would recur when they were joined by war widows from the conflicts in Vietnam [harvnb|Cooke|2003] and Afghanistan. [harvnb|Alcorn|2003] Matters came to a head in 1968 when the War Widows Guild formally severed its connection with Vasey Housing.

In recognition of her work on behalf of war widows, Jessie was appointed an Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) in the 1950 King's Birthday Honours, [LondonGazette|issue=38930|supp=yes|startpage=2810|date=2 June 1950|accessdate=2008-04-08] and a Commander (CBE) in the 1963 Queen's Birthday Honours. [LondonGazette|issue=43011|supp=yes|startpage=4828|date=31 May 1963|accessdate=2008-04-08] In 1953 she was sponsored by the Australian government to attend the Coronation of Queen Elizabeth II.

Vasey died of cerebral thrombosis on 22 September 1966 at Grafton, New South Wales, while on her way back to Melbourne after visiting guild members in Queensland. She was buried with Presbyterian forms in Lilydale cemetery. She was survived by her younger son Robert,George having died from an aneurysm on 5 November 1960. [harvnb|Clark|1986|p=191] Robert Alan Vasey died on 21 September 2008. [Sydney Morning Herald death notice 27 September 2008]

Popular culture

The photograph at the top of the page of Jessie farewelling Alan was used at the conclusion of episodes of the 1980s TV series "The Sullivans" and came to symbolise loss to a generation of Australians. The photograph is held by the Australian War Memorial, and a copy is on display there.

Jessie Vasey's story was chosen by the National Museum of Australia as one of fifty "stories from the emotional heart of Australia". Her photo-portrait forms part of of the display.

Notes

References

* Citation
last = Alcorn
first = Gay
author-link =
title = Why SAS widow's quarrel is a matter of honour
newspaper = The Age
year = 2003
date = 2003-02-24
url = http://www.theage.com.au/articles/2003/02/23/1045935273835.html
accessdate = 2008-04-06
.
* Citation
last = Clark
first = Mavis Thorpe
title = No Mean Destiny: The Story of the War Widows' Guild of Australia 1945–85
publisher = Hyland House Publishing
year = 1986
location = South Yarra, Victoria
ISBN = 0908090935
.
* Citation
last = Cooke
first = Marie
title = Australian War Widows: A Case Study to Challenge Public Policy
journal = Australian Journal of Social Issues
year = 2003
volume = 38
issue = 4
pages = 465–475
.
* Citation
last = Damousi
first = Joy
title = Australian Dictionary of Biography
volume = 16
publisher = Melbourne University Press
year = 2002
pages = 442–443
url = http://www.adb.online.anu.edu.au/biogs/A160533b.htm
accessdate = 2008-03-28
.
* Citation
last = Hilton
first = Della
title = Dr. Mary: the story of Dame Mary Herring
publisher = D. H. Media
year = 1989
location = Melbourne
ISBN = 0731671368
.
* Citation
last = Horner
first = David
authorlink = David Horner
title = General Vasey's War
publisher = Melbourne University Press
year = 1992
location = Melbourne
isbn = 0-522-84462-6
.
* Citation
last = Long
first = Gavin
authorlink = Gavin Long
title = To Benghazi
url = http://www.awm.gov.au/histories/chapter.asp?volume=17
series = Australia in the War of 1939–1945. Series 1 – Army
format = PDF
year = 1952
publisher = Australian War Memorial
location = Canberra
.
* Citation
last = Smith
first = Mary
title = War Widows: The Forgotten Victims of War
journal = Journal of the Australian War Memorial
issue = 55
pages = 9–14
publisher = Australian War Memorial
location = Canberra
date = October 1984
.

External links

* [http://www.womenaustralia.info/biogs/IMP0249b.htm Vasey Biography at Australian Women Biographical entry]
* [http://www.adb.online.anu.edu.au/biogs/A160533b.htm Vasey Biography at the Australian Dictionary of Biography]
* [http://www.vaseyhousing.com.au/ Vasey Housing Association]


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем сделать НИР

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Vasey — may refer to:People with the surname Vasey: *George Vasey (botanist) *George Alan Vasey (Australian soldier) *Jessie Mary Vasey (War widow) …   Wikipedia

  • George Alan Vasey — Infobox Military Person name= George Alan Vasey lived= 29 March 1895 – 5 March 1945 placeofbirth= Malvern East, Victoria placeofdeath= near Cairns, Queensland caption= Portrait of Major General George Vasey by A. M. E. Bale nickname= Bloody… …   Wikipedia

  • Methodist Ladies' College, Melbourne — For other schools of the same name, see Methodist Ladies College (disambiguation). Methodist Ladies College, Melbourne Latin: Deo Domuique ( For God and for Home ) …   Wikipedia

  • Lauriston Girls' School — Infobox Aust school private name = Lauriston Girls School motto = Sancte Sapienter Strenue (Latin: Holiness, Wisdom, Strength ) established = 1901 type = Independent, Single sex, Day school denomination = Non denominational slogan = A school for… …   Wikipedia

  • List of people on stamps of Australia — This is a list of people on the postage stamps of Australia. NOTOC compactTOC 2006 Commonwealth Games Gold Medal winners, Australian Antarctic Territory, Christmas Island, Cocos (Keeling) Islands, See also New South Wales 1850 1912 *Charles… …   Wikipedia

  • List of World War II topics (J) — # J XX # J Malan Heslop # J. Aird Nesbitt # J. Allen Frear, Jr. # J. B. Stoner # J. Braid # J. C. Gilbert # J. Caleb Boggs # J. Carson Mark # J. D. Salinger # J. D. Tippit # J. Douglas Blackwood # J. F. Lehmann # J. Fraser McLuskey # J. Henry… …   Wikipedia

  • D. H. Lawrence — This article is about the early 20th century novelist. For the American actor, see David H. Lawrence XVII. D. H. Lawrence Born David Herbert Richards Lawrence 11 September 1885(1885 09 11) Ea …   Wikipedia

  • Lawrence, D.H. — ▪ English writer Introduction in full  David Herbert Lawrence  born September 11, 1885, Eastwood, Nottinghamshire, England died March 2, 1930, Vence, France  English author of novels, short stories, poems, plays, essays, travel books, and letters …   Universalium

  • Britische Filmgeschichte — Dieser Artikel wurde aufgrund von inhaltlichen Mängeln auf der Qualitätssicherungsseite der Redaktion:Film und Fernsehen eingetragen. Dies geschieht, um die Qualität der Artikel aus dem Themengebiet Film und Fernsehen auf ein akzeptables Niveau… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • 2009 New Year Honours — The New Year Honours 2009 principally for the United Kingdom as well as the Commonwealth Realms were announced on 31 December 2008,[1] to celebrate the year passed and mark the beginning of 2009. The recipients of honours are displayed here as… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”