Title and statement of responsibility area
Title proper
Mary Jean Gilmore fonds
General material designation
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Level of description
Fonds
Repository
Edition area
Edition statement
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Class of material specific details area
Statement of scale (cartographic)
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Issuing jurisdiction and denomination (philatelic)
Dates of creation area
Date(s)
-
[194-?] (Creation)
- Creator
- Gilmore, Mary Jean
Physical description area
Physical description
3 p.
Publisher's series area
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Archival description area
Name of creator
Biographical history
Mary Jean (Cameron) Gilmore, a prominent Australian socialist poet and journalist, was born on 16 August 1865 at Cotta Walla near Goulburn, New South Wales. After completing her teaching exams in 1882, she accepted a position as a teacher at Wagga Wagga Public School, where she worked until December 1885. After a short teaching spell at Illabo she took up a teaching position at Silverton near the mining town of Broken Hill. There Gilmore developed her socialist views and began writing poetry.
In 1890, she moved to Sydney, where she became part of the "Bulletin school" of radical writers. She followed William Lane and other socialist idealists to Paraguay in 1896, where they had established a communal settlement called New Australia two years earlier. At Lane's breakaway settlement Cosme she married William Gilmore in 1897.
Gilmore's first volume of poetry was published in 1910, and for the ensuing half-century she was regarded as one of Australia's most popular and widely read poets. In 1908 she became women's editor of The Worker, the newspaper of Australia's largest and most powerful trade union, the Australian Workers' Union (AWU). She was the union's first woman member. The Worker gave her a platform for her journalism, in which she campaigned for better working conditions for working women, for children's welfare and for a better deal for the indigenous Australians. Gilmore accepted appointment as a Dame Commander of the Order of the British Empire in 1937, becoming Dame Mary Gilmore.
Custodial history
Scope and content
The fonds consists of holographs of two unpublished poems, 'Anthem for Australia' and 'The Sea.'
Notes area
Physical condition
Immediate source of acquisition
Transfer from Acquisitions Unit, Douglas Library, Queen's University.
Arrangement
Language of material
- English
Script of material
Location of originals
2999 (Gilmore)
Availability of other formats
Restrictions on access
Open