Exhibition marks women’s suffrage
As part of the 125th anniversary of women’s suffrage, the Otaki Museum has opened an exhibition called
At the opening of the exhibition last week museum trustee and exhibition co-ordinator Di Buchan thanked team members Jill Abigail and Liz Jull for their hard work.
She also thanked the Otaki Genealogical Society for their contribution to the information.
She said putting together the exhibition has been a fun experience and one in which the team learned a lot from.
She hoped this would be the same for those visiting the exhibition, particularly younger generations who nowadays take women’s equality and right to vote for granted.
The exhibition will be on display until at least the end of October. Opening hours are Thursdays, Fridays and Saturdays from 10am until 2pm.
This 125th anniversary of women’s suffrage gives us the opportunity to reflect that just over 100 years ago, upon marriage a man acquired his wife’s property. He was the sole owner of their children, he had no obligations to provide for her on his passing and only he had the right to influence the laws of this country.
The catalysts for women’s voting rights were twofold.
To address the injustice of women’s unequal status in society and secondly, to have some control over the laws by which the whole population was governed and particularly, the laws governing the liquor industry.
It was the latter that was a hugely influential factor behind the opposition of many men, including politicians such as the Prime Minister Richard Seddon who was heavily involved in the liquor trade himself.
The link between alcohol consumption and women’s franchise should not be underestimated.
Every town had at least one pub and alcohol was the cause of much grief and poverty for women and children.
Many women felt they had to stop that and in many places they did.
In 1984 the first referendum of the sale of alcohol was held and the newly enfranchised women voted in their thousands.
The impact was swift and severe with many areas going dry within a matter of months of the vote.
In 1902 William Pember Reeves (previously minister of justice, education and labour and at the time of writing, high commissioner to London) wrote, “One fine morning of September 1893, the women of New Zealand woke up and found themselves enfranchised.
“The privilege was theirs, given freely and spontaneously, in the easiest and most unexpected manner in the world.”
Talk about alternative facts.
Now we know that he actually voted in favour of women’s suffrage because Mrs Reeves in on record as having written to Kate Sheppard advising her that she could count on Mr Reeves’ vote because she ‘had seen to that’.
There does not seem to be any record of what Mrs Reeves did to ensure her husband complied with her instructions.
Here is this man who was in Parliament at the time of the debates which went on for three years or more, nine years later rewriting history to project the image that the politicians of the time were the good guys and the women of New Zealand the passive recipients of their benevolence.
This exhibition provides the proof if any is needed, that Reeves’ version of history, which became widely perpetrated around the world, was a falsehood which did great disservice to all those women, our maternal ancestors, who campaigned tirelessly for years and finally won — by two votes.
This exhibition gives us and our children and our grandchildren an opportunity to thank these women and to acknowledge how we have benefited from their battles. The status of women in this country, the opportunities we have now to live full and independent lives should never be taken for granted. We need to ensure younger generations are aware of this.