Jessie Street | |
Birth Name: | Jessie Mary Grey Lillingston |
Birth Date: | 18 April 1889 |
Birth Place: | Ranchi, Bihar, Bengal Presidency, British Raj (now in Jharkhand, India) |
Death Place: | Sydney, Australia |
Nationality: | Australian |
Monuments: | Jessie Street Gardens, Jessie Street National Women's Library |
Alma Mater: | University of Sydney (BA, 1911) |
Spouse: | Sir Kenneth Whistler Street |
Children: | Sir Laurence Whistler Street |
Relatives: | Edward Ogilvie (grandfather) Sir Philip Whistler Street (father-in-law) |
Family: | Street |
Jessie Mary Grey Street (née Lillingston; 18 April 1889 – 2 July 1970) was an Australian diplomat, suffragette and campaigner for Indigenous Australian rights, commonly referred to as Mrs Kenneth Street,[1] but later dubbed "Red Jessie" by the media. As Australia's only female delegate to the founding of the United Nations in 1945, Jessie was Australia's first female delegate to the United Nations, where she ensured the inclusion of sex as a non-discrimination clause in the United Nations Charter. She was Lady Street from 1956, with the elevation of her husband Sir Kenneth Whistler Street.
Jessie Mary Grey Lillingston was born on 18 April 1889 at Ranchi, Bihar, India. Her father, Charles Alfred Gordon Lillingston, (great-grandson of Sir George Grey, 1st Baronet), was a member of the Imperial Civil Service in India.[2] Her mother Mabel Harriet Ogilvie was the daughter of Australian politician Edward David Stuart Ogilvie. She was involved with Dorette Margarethe MacCallum and others who were challenging the patriarchy at the University of Sydney where the men were trying to monopolise the sports facilities.[3] In 1911 as a Bachelor of Arts.[4]
In 1916, she married Kenneth Whistler Street,[4] who was knighted in 1944.[5] Her father-in-law Sir Philip Whistler Street served as Chief Justice of New South Wales, as did her husband Kenneth and their youngest son, Laurence, who was knighted in 1976. Their other children were Belinda, Philippa and Roger.
Street was a prominent figure in Australian and international political life for over 50 years, from the women's suffrage movement in England to the Aboriginal Australian rights.[6] Street ran in the 1943 Australian federal election as a member of the Australian Labor Party against United Australia Party frontbencher Eric Harrison for the Sydney Eastern Suburbs seat of Wentworth, and nearly defeated him amid that year's massive Labor landslide. She led the field on the first count, and only the preferences of conservative independent Bill Wentworth allowed Harrison to survive. Her attempt was the closest a Labor candidate has ever come to winning the conservative stronghold of Wentworth.
At the San Francisco Conference in 1945, Street was Australia's only female delegate to the founding of the United Nations, where she played a key role alongside Eleanor Roosevelt in ensuring that sex was included with race and religion as a non-discrimination clause in the United Nations Charter.
In 1941 the future prime minister Ben Chifley received a united deputation from a number of women's organisations. They were encouraging him to create a tax on men who were not married. This suggestion was made in preference to a proposal to introduce a new tax on the total income of married couples. The delegates were Vivienne Newson, Edna Lillian Nelson, Erna Keighley and Street.[7]
In 1949, Street was made a charter member of the Australian Peace Council.[8] The Jessie Street Centre, the Jessie Street Trust, the Jessie Street National Women's Library and Jessie Street Gardens exist in her honour.[9]
She was known as Red Jessie due to her support of the Soviet Union during the Cold War.