Selina Anderson

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Selina Anderson (12 May 187830 November 1964) was an Australian trade unionist and the first woman to contest a seat in the Australian House of Representatives.

Born Selina Charters near Hill End in New South Wales, she changed her surname when her mother remarried in 1892. After finishing school she worked as an artist and photographic retoucher.

The 1903 Federal Election was the first election in which women were entitled to stand for parliament. Anderson decided to contest the Sydney seat of Dalley as a protectionist candidate. Although unsuccessful, she polled a respectable 18% of the vote.

The following year she was a member of the organising committee of the Labor Council of New South Wales and helped establish the Cardboard Box makers Union, of which she became secretary. By 1906, she was one of seven women on the state executive of the Australian Labor Party but unsuccessful in gaining Labor endorsement to contest a seat.

In 1908, she married Christopher Siggins and, as Selina Siggins, was one of the first two women to contest the South Australian Legislative Assembly. Running as an independent she polled just 2% of the vote.

In later life, she lived near Canterbury Race Course in Sydney and ran race horses. She died in 1964.

[edit] Reference

  • Australian Dictionary of Biography [1]
Persondata
NAME Anderson, Selina
ALTERNATIVE NAMES
SHORT DESCRIPTION Australian trade unionist, first woman to stand for the Australian House of Representatives
DATE OF BIRTH 12 May 1878
PLACE OF BIRTH Hill End, New South Wales, Australia
DATE OF DEATH 30 November 1964
PLACE OF DEATH Ashbury, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia