27 August 1902 - Women's Franchise Act (voting)

On 27 August 1902 the Women's Franchise Act gave women the right to vote in state elections in New South Wales.

Sir Henry Parkes had introduced electoral reform bills in 1890 and 1891 which included provisions for women to vote but both bills were defeated. The Women's Franchise Act passed on the third attempt and followed similar success on the Federal stage when Australia became the second nation in the world to give women the right to vote.

Women could not stand for election for the New South Wales Legislative Assembly until 1918 and the first female elected was Millicent Preston-Stanley in 1925.

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Ellen Marshall’s kitchen dresser

(Re)making a home

An evocative collection of household items belonging to the last tenants of Susannah Place

https://www.records.nsw.gov.au/sites/default/files/Collection/Convicts/a-female-escape-artist-2-1024.jpg
On This Day

10 Sep 1823 - escapee re-transported to NSW

On the 10th of September 1823 Susan Courtney was tried in England for returning from transportation

Two women seated on simple bed in dormitory style display holding large book.

40,000 women and the dormitory experience

It’s well known that 2253 Irish orphan girls were some of the first occupants of Sydney’s Female Immigration Depot, but they were only just the beginning of the women’s story at Hyde Park Barracks