Mary Rogers (politician)

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Mary Rogers
Councillor of the City of Richmond
In office
5 November 1920 – August 1925
Personal details
Born
Mary Skeahan

2 August 1872
Melbourne, Australia
Died25 September 1932
Richmond, Victoria, Australia
Resting placeBoroondara General Cemetery
Political partyLabor
SpousePatrick Rogers (died 1910)
Children5

Mary Catherine Rogers (born Mary Skeahan, 2 August 1872 − 25 September 1932) was an Australian magistrate,

trade unionist, and the first woman elected to local government in Victoria
.

Early years

Rogers was raised in

After her husband died in 1910, Rogers initially worked as a cleaner, before being appointed secretary, then president, of the Women Office Cleaners' Union, and later vice-president of the Miscellaneous Workers' Union.[1][2]

Political career

Rogers became an organiser for the Australian Labor Party in 1918, serving as secretary of the party's North Richmond branch for several years.

On 5 November 1920, she was elected to Richmond City Council at a by-election, becoming he first woman elected to local government in Victoria, and the second in Australia (after Susan Benny).[3]

Rogers was re-elected unopposed in 1922. In 1925, she became a member of the council's finance and legislative committee, but was at the elections in August later that year.[2]

Later life and death

In 1928, she became one of first women to be appointed a justice of the peace in Victoria, serving as a special magistrate at the Children's Court at Richmond.[2][4]

Rogers died of cancer on 25 September 1932, and was buried at Boroondara Cemetery in Kew. Future federal Labor leader Arthur Calwell was a pallbearer at her funeral, where several prominent Labor and trade union officials were present.[2]

Legacy

In March 2016, the

traffic lights with a likeness of Rogers.[3]

Mary Rogers Square on the corner of Church Street and Bridge Road in Richmond is named after Rogers.[5]

References

  1. ^ a b "Rogers, Mary Catherine (1872 - 1932)". The Australian Women's Register.
  2. ^ a b c d "Mary Catherine Rogers (1872–1932)". Australian Dictionary of Biography.
  3. ^ a b "Green man becomes a woman in Melbourne". Nine News.
  4. ^ "CELEBRATING MARY ROGERS". City of Yarra.
  5. ^ "Melbourne council honours Mary Rogers by changing walk signal at Richmond crossing". ABC News.