Ruth Dowling and John Hubert Fraser Fairfax were married on 2 February 1899,[2] an occasion "for great rejoicing, because it was the wedding day of the popular and universally-beloved daughter of the Squire of Lue, Miss Dowling, whose hand was claimed by Mr. Hubert Fairfax, son of Sir James Fairfax, of The Sydney Morning Herald."[4] The Mudgee Guardian and North-Western Representative reported that the bride was "beautiful in a dress of white duchesse satin, trimmed with cream lace and chiffon and flowers on bodice. She wore a wreath of orange blossoms and heather in her hair, with diamond crescent, the gift of her father and mother, and on the bodice a diamond brooch, the gift of Sir James and Lady Fairfax, whilst the floral bouquet, the gift of the bridegroom, completed a living picture that will long be remembered by all present."[4]
The Fairfax family moved to Dalmore Station near Longreach, Queensland,[5] then in 1908 to Marinya station near Cambooya, Queensland on the Darling Downs.[2][1] In 1909 their only child, Vincent was born.[6] They travelled to England in 1912, but returned to Australia at the outbreak of the First World War.[6]
Leadership of women's organisations
Ruth Fairfax became President of the Toowoomba branch of the Australian Comfort Fund, providing support for soldiers fighting in the war[7] and she became recognised as a practical woman with organisational and leadership skills.[6]
There were, in the early years of the 20th century, a number of women's groups established, including the National Council of Women, Brisbane Women's Club, and the Queensland Women's Electoral League.[6] There was however, a need identified for an organisation dedicated to the needs of country women. On 10 August 1922, in a meeting at the Albert Hall, Brisbane, Fairfax was elected President of the newly established Queensland Country Women's Association.[2][1][8] This meeting was timed to coincide with the Brisbane Exhibition, when there were likely to be large numbers of rural women in Brisbane.[6] The first meeting of the newly formed Association was held in Toowoomba on 12 September 1922, chaired by Fairfax.[9] Fairfax then went on a tour of six months around outback Queensland, establishing branches of the Country Women's Association and recruiting women to their local branches.[2] In 1929, Fairfax travelled to the UK where she studied at Women's Institutes in England and Scotland.[1] She also represented the Country Women's Association at the First International Conference of Rural Women's Organisations in London,[10] and at the International Council of Women in Vienna.[11][12]
Her passion for women in country areas was long-standing, and she thought of country women as a sisterhood, promoting the idea of mutual help and support.[13][14] She and her family moved to New South Wales in 1931, as her son took up a post with The Sydney Morning Herald, a family business concern since 1841.[11] Her home in Sydney was the 6,986-square-metre (75,200 sq ft), Elaine, on the waterfront at Seven Shillings Beach, Double Bay.[15] This property was built by the Fairfax family in 1891 and, in 2019, was sold for in excess of A$70 million to Scott Farquhar.[16]
She was actively involved in a number of other organisations, including as the vice-president of the ladies' auxiliary of the Adult Deaf and Dumb Society of New South Wales,[21] and as a member of the board of directors of St. Luke's Hospital, Darlinghurst.[22] She was a member of the State executive and then the General Council of the Girl Guides' Association.[23] She was appointed a trustee of the Public Library of New South Wales in 1937,[24] and served in that role until her death.[25] She was chairman of the Women's Council of the Australian Board of Missions,[26][27] and a patroness of the Kooroora Club for business girls, which formed in 1929.[28][29]
In 1944, the Queensland Country Women's Association established the Ruth Fairfax Bursary.[13]
Later life
In her later years, she was afflicted with diabetes. Fairfax died on 1 February 1948 from chronicnephritis in St Luke's Hospital, Potts Point, Sydney.[2]Ruth Fairfax House, the new state headquarters of the Queensland Country Women's Association, opened on 10 February after her death. It was a Japanese house imported from Japan in 1878 by Judge George William Paul.[13][31]
Her husband, John Hubert Fairfax (1872-1950), was a pastoralist, businessman and philanthropist, and grandson of John Fairfax, an early owner of The Sydney Morning Herald.[5] Her son, Sir Vincent Charles Fairfax, (1909–1993), was well known for his generous philanthropy and supported organisations such as the Boy Scouts and Outward Bound.[32] In 1962, Ruth Fairfax House was saved from demolition by dismantling it and reconstructing it in Ingham; it was listed on the Queensland Heritage Register in 2003.[33]
Gallery
Fundrasing in aid of the Toowoomba Soldiers' Sock and Comforts Fund, during World War I. The photograph shows Mrs Fairfax's novelty stall.
^"Kooroora Club". The Argus (Melbourne). No. 27, 523. Victoria, Australia. 3 November 1934. p. 10. Retrieved 1 February 2017 – via National Library of Australia.
^Kooroora Club (1930), Papers, retrieved 1 February 2017