Marie Pitt

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Marie Elizabeth Josephine Pitt (6 August 186920 May 1948) was an Australian poet and socialist activist, also journalist and Unitarian. Pitt wrote very highly coloured nature poetry, once much anthologised; and also wrote poetry in support of the socialist and labour movements. Marie Pitt was the companion of fellow poet and socialist Bernard O'Dowd.

[edit] Life

Pitt's maiden name was McKeown. She was born in the gold-mining town of Bullumwaal in Gippsland region of the Australian state of Victoria, north of the town of Bairnsdale. Her early childhood was mostly spent in Wy Yung, a tiny settlement near Bairnsdale, where she laboured on her parents' "selection" or small farm. After failing to qualify as a teacher she found work in Bairnsdale as a photogrpahic retoucher in 1887, and married the Tasmanian farmer and miner William Pitt in 1893 with whom she lived in Tasmania, the Western Australian goldfields, Bairnsale again and finally Melbourne where she joined the Victorian Socialist Party and became editor of its journal The Socialist. In 1900 the prestigious Bulletin accepted one of her poems, her first volume of poetry was published in 1911. William Pitt died in 1912 of a miners' disease. Marie and William Pitt had four children together, three of whom survived them.[1][2]

After William Pitt's death Pitt worked at various white collar jobs and pursued her writing; as well as her work with the Victorian Socialist Party. She lived with Bernard O'Dowd as her partner from 1920 until her death. She shared with him support for the Victorian Socialist Party, and for Unitarianism. Her political views were not identical with his however; notably, and unlike O'Dowd, Marie Pitt took a strong pacifist line. Another matter on which they differed was the endemic racism of the Australian labour movement; Marie Pitt, in a word, supported it and spoke of the the "woman's instinct for racial purity". O'Dowd took an anti-racist view.[3]

Pitt won the Australian Broadcasting Commission national song writing competition in 1944 with her entry Ave, Australia.[1]

[edit] Poetry Collections

  • The Horses of the Hills (1911)
  • Bairnsdale (1922)
  • The Poems of Marie E. J. Pitt (1924)
  • Selected Poems (1944)

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b Anderson, Hugh (1988). Pitt, Marie Elizabeth Josephine (1869 - 1948). Australian Dictionary of Biography. Australian National University. Retrieved on 2007-10-09.
  2. ^ Gardner, P.D.. Marie E.J.Pitt. (1869-1948). Radical traditional. Takver. Retrieved on 2007-10-06.
  3. ^ Gould, Bob. The ALP, the labour movement and racism. Retrieved on 2007-10-06.
Persondata
NAME Pitt, Marie
ALTERNATIVE NAMES Marie McKeown (maiden name)
SHORT DESCRIPTION Australian poet and socialist activist
DATE OF BIRTH 6 August 1869
PLACE OF BIRTH Bullumwaal, Victoria, Australia
DATE OF DEATH 20 May 1948
PLACE OF DEATH Australia