May Moss

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Alice Frances Mabel (May) Moss (née Wilson) (April 27, 1869 - July 18, 1948) was an Australian women's rights activist.

She was born in Ballarat, Victoria and was educated at the Presbyterian Ladies' College in East Melbourne. She married grazier Isidore Henry Moss in March 1887 and they had two daughters. While her children were young, Moss began to campaign for the rights of women and served as vice-president of the Australian Women's National League in 1906-14, during that time she actively campaigned in Victoria for womens suffrage. She was a member of the National Council of Women of Victoria from its formation in 1904.

She was an Australian delegate at the League of Nations Assembly at Geneva in 1927, where she was the first woman to sit on a finance committee. She attend the International Council of Women in Geneva in the same year and in 1928 was elected the councils vice president, a position she held until her death. She was the first president of the National Council of Women of Australia, serving from 1931 to 1936. She was involved in organising the centenary of Melbourne celebrations, she was on the executive of the Victorian and Melbourne Centenary Celebrations Council and chaired the Women's Centenary Council.

Interested in health she was the first female non-professional member of the National Health and Medical Research Council.

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