Fraser grew up and was educated in Glasgow where she taught orphans and had been influenced by the writings of Robert Blatchford.[1] Janet sometimes used her maternal grandmother's surname, Henderson, as a middle name. She married Frederick George Kemp on 25 November 1903. She left for Auckland, New Zealand, in 1909 with her first husband, Frederick George Kemp and her son, Harold.[2]
In Wellington, she met Peter Fraser in 1911, who she worked with during the flu epidemic in 1918.[2] After her divorce from Kemp on 4 October 1919, she married Peter Fraser on 1 November 1919.[2] Fraser donated much of her time to child welfare and health issues in New Zealand spending 10 years on the Wellington Hospital Board.[1][3] She was awarded the King George V Silver Jubilee Medal in 1935.[4]
In the late 1930s, Fraser recommended efforts to help pregnant women have access to pain medication during childbirth.[5]
When her husband became Prime Minister of New Zealand in 1940, she traveled with him and acted as a "political adviser, researcher, gatekeeper and personal support system."[2]
During World War II, she was in charge of the official women's war effort and brought Polish refugee children to New Zealand.[2] In August 1943, she greeted Eleanor Roosevelt on her visit to New Zealand.[6] Janet Fraser died on 7 March 1945 in Wellington, and was buried at Karori Cemetery.[7]
Honours
In 2021, Janet Fraser and Peter Fraser, in recognition of their help for the Polish children were awarded by the President of Poland with Virtus et Fraternitas Medal.[8]
^ abcdeEwan, Elizabeth; Innes, Sue; Reynolds, Sian, eds. (2006). The Biographical Dictionary of Scottish Women: From the Earliest Times to 2004. Edinburg: Edinburgh University Press. p. 128. ISBN0748617132.