Emily Dobson

philanthropist
The basics

Quick Facts

Introphilanthropist
PlacesAustralia
wasActivist Philanthropist
Work fieldActivism
Gender
Female
Birth10 October 1842, Port Arthur, Tasman Council, Tasmania, Australia
Death1934Hobart, Tasmania, Australia (aged 91 years)
Star signLibra
The details

Biography

Emily Dobson (10 October 1842 – 5 June 1934) was an Australian philanthropist. She was known for her work supporting women's charities.

Early life

Dobson was born in Port Arthur, Tasmania on 10 October 1842 to Thomas James Lempriere and Charlotte Lempriere née Smith. She was educated at home by her father. She married lawyer and politician, Henry Dobson, at the Bothwell Church of England on 4 February 1868.

Philanthropy work

Dobson began her philanthropy work after her husband was elected to the Parliament of Tasmania in 1891. She became secretary of the Women's Sanitary Association in September 1891 which was founded to fight an outbreak of typhoid in Hobart. The group petitioned Hobart local council and ran candidates for the municipal election of 1892, alongside the men's Sanitary and General Improvement Association.

In 1892 she founded the Ministering Children's League and in 1898 founded the ladies' committee of the Blind, Deaf and Dumb Institution. Dobson also supported nursing institutions and was one of the founders of the New Town Consumptives' Sanatorium in 1905 as well as being a life-long patron of the Tasmanian Bush Nursing Association.

Dobson was also a supporter of temperance and was the vice-president of the Women's Christian Temperance Union of Tasmania.

In 1899, she became vice-president of the newly founded National Council of Women of Tasmania and attended the 1899 International Council of Women meeting in London and was a delegate at the International Woman Suffrage Alliance Congress in Amsterdam in 1908. In 1919, the National Council of Women of Tasmania established the Emily Dobson Philanthropic Prize in recognition of her work.

Dobson died in Hobart on 5 June 1934 and was buried in Queenborough cemetery.

The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article on 17 Aug 2020. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.