Book Chapter

Reading the Silences: Suffrage Activists and Race in Nineteenth-Century Settler Societies

Patricia Grimshaw

Women's Rights and Human Rights | Palgrave Macmillan UK | Published : 2001

Abstract

In December 1894 a majority of men in both houses of the legislature of the colony of South Australia passed an Act granting women 21 years and over the right to vote and stand for Parliament. This was without doubt progressive liberal legislation, through which South Australian women became among the first women in the world to enjoy full political rights. Since the 1894 Act had no race bar, Aboriginal women received the vote along with white women, just as Aboriginal men had in effect been enfranchised in 1858 when South Australia brought in universal male suffrage. The vote had done nothing to improve Aboriginal men’s situations, nor the life chances of their families. Aborigines’ problem..

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University of Melbourne Researchers