President of the Woman's Christian Temperance Union (WCTU) of South Australia
Elizabeth Webb Nicholls (21 February 1850 – 3 August 1943) was a key suffragist in the campaign for votes for women in South Australia during the 1890s. She took on several high-profile roles in the capital of South Australia, Adelaide and was President of the Woman's Christian Temperance Union (WCTU) of South Australia, one of the most prominent organisations in the successful campaigns which made South Australia the first of the Australian colonies to grant women the right to vote in 1894.[1][2]
Background
Nicholls was born on 21 February 1850 in Rundle Street, Adelaide to parents Samuel Bakewell, grocer, and his wife Mary Ann, née Pye.[1] Following her mother's death when she was just three years old, Nicholls spent some years living with relatives in England before returning to Adelaide. Her father remarried, his new spouse being Mary Ann's sister Eliza Hannah.[1] Nicholls herself married warehouseman Alfred Richard Nicholls on 2 August 1870, having one daughter and four sons as well as taking in two orphaned relatives who they also raised in their household.
As a young woman Nicholls is quoted as saying I long to have the will and the power to be very useful.[3]
An active member of the Archer Street Wesleyan church in North Adelaide, Nicholls taught Sunday School and distributed religious tracts.[4]
Nicholls was said to be "short in stature, with a benign expression, she was a pleasant, unself-conscious speaker and quickly earned her members' approval for her efficiency and enthusiasm",[5] Nicholls was described as being "prone to chafe quietly at 'unreasonable restraint'"[1]
Woman's Christian Temperance Union
In July 1886, three months after its formation, Nicholls joined the "WCTU of South Australia". Becoming heavily involved in 1888, Nicholls became the provisional president of the Adelaide branch late that year and was elected colonial president in 1889, holding the position until 1897.[4]
In 1891, Nicholls became one of the first women admitted to the South Australian Temperance Alliance.[6]
Nicholls founded the WCTU's journal Our Federation and was its editor from 1898 to 1904 when it ceased.[6]
Women's suffrage
Nicholls reinvigorated the WCTU's suffrage work and encouraged women to write to their local Member of Parliament. She invested large amounts of effort in educating women on their political potential, speaking in numerous places on the basics of enrolling and voting, using her 'Platform of Principles'.[4]
Nicholls joined the Women's Suffrage League of South Australia and subsequently became a League Councillor. In 1894 she assumed the role of Colonial Superintendent of the WCTU's Suffrage Department.[7]
Nicholls was an appointed member of the Adelaide Hospital Board from 1895 to 1922 and was one of the first four female Justices of the Peace appointed in 1915 and would often sit on the Children's Court.[6] Nicholls advocated for similar female appointments in other Australian States and argued for prison reform. She also sought the improvement of conditions and wages for working women which led to her becoming a shareholder of the women's South Australian Co-operative Clothing Co.[6]
Nicholls remained committed to the WCTU throughout her life and was involved in successful referendum of hotel closing hours which resulted in the imposition of a 6:00 pm closing time in 1915. She justified all reforms on the grounds of temperance and social purity.[6]
^"Nicholls, Elizabeth Webb (1850–1943)". The Australian Women's Register. The National Foundation of Australian Women and The University of Melbourne. Retrieved 27 November 2014.