Mary Nelis
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Mary Nelis | |
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In office 1998 – 2007 |
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Political party | Sinn Féin |
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Website | Mary Nelis |
Mary Margaret Nelis, nee Elliott was born in Wellington St in the Bogside area of Derry City, Northern Ireland, in 1935. She is the eldest daughter of the late Catherine and Denis Elliott. She was educated at St Eugene's Convent School and left school at fourteen to work in the Hogg and Mitchell shirt factory. In 1955 she married William Nelis. They had nine children, eight sons and a daughter. Their eldest son was killed in a road traffic accident in 1974.[1]
In the early 1960s Mary Nelis organised the first community association in the Foyle Hill estate and helped spread community groups in other areas of the City, including the Protestant Fountain estate.
She became active in the civil rights campaign demanding equal rights for the people of the City. She trained as an adult Literacy Teacher and was a founder member of the Derry Reading Workshop, an organisation set up to help those with educational needs. In 1974 she joined the Social Democratic and Labour Party (SDLP), but resigned a year later. In 1976, she became active in the Relatives Action Committee, an organisation campaigning for prisoners rights. Two of her sons were imprisoned in the H Blocks in HMP Maze. Her work with young people led to the setting up of Dove House, a Resource Centre in the Bogside. She later established the Templemor Co-op, a craft co-operative for woman with exceptional sewing skills.
In 1981 she joined Sinn Féin. She was elected to Derry City Council in 1993 and served two terms. She was elected to the Northern Ireland Assembly in 1998, one of only fourteen women in 108 members. She was re-elected in 2003 but resigned a year later to care for her husband, who sustained injuries in a road traffic accident, and was succeeded by Raymond McCartney. She is the current Hon. President of Sinn Féin in Derry, the second person and only woman to receive the honour. She was presented with the Paul O Dwyer Award by the IAUC for her work for peace and justice in Ireland. She writes the political column in the Sunday Journal and also contributes to the Sinn Féin paper, An Phoblacht.