Helen Wilson (writer)Helen Mary Wilson OBE (née Ostler; 4 May 1869 – 16 April 1957) was a New Zealand teacher, farmer, community leader and writer. She was born in Oamaru, New Zealand, in 1869.[1] Political lifeWilson was active in the Women's Division of the Farmer's Union and one of the early Dominion presidents. She founded the Piopio branch of the organisation in 1927,[2] and in the 1937 Coronation Honours, she was appointed an Officer of the Order of the British Empire, in recognition of her service as Dominion president of the Women's Division.[3] Interviewed for a radio program during the 1950s, Wilson recalled the process involved for women in New Zealand in obtaining the right to vote and also discussed the Married Women's Property Act.[4] BooksWilson was the author of several books, including the autobiography My First Eighty Years.[2] This book is regarded as a New Zealand classic.[5] Personal lifeWilson spent several years in the North Island town of Levin with her mother, prominent businesswoman and women's suffrage campaigner Emma Ostler.[5] Helen Wilson married politician Charles Kendall Wilson on 16 May 1892.[6] She lived for most of her adult life in Piopio in the Waitomo district of the North Island. She moved to Hamilton in 1942. References
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