The Karrakatta Club is a female-only women's club in Perth, Western Australia.[1][2] Established in 1894, it was the first women's club in Australia.
History
The Karrakatta Club was founded in 1894 by members of Amy Jane Best's St George Reading Circle.[3] The St George Reading Circle was formed around 1887 for the purpose of exchanging and discussing reading material, and debating current affairs. Following a visit from an American woman named Dr Emily Ryder, the Circle decided to form a new club modelled on the Education Clubs that were popular in America.[4] Amy Jane Best constructed the constitution.[3] The objective of the Club was to bring into one body the women of the community for mutual improvement which included involvement in local issues affecting women at that time, social justice issues, and social engagement. The club's motto, suggested by Edith Cowan, is Spectemur Agendo, which means "let us be judged by our actions".[5] The Club's first President was Lady Madeline Onslow.
In 1904, ten years after the founding of the Karrakatta Club, the first Lyceum Club was founded in London by Miss Constance Smedley. The aim of the Lyceum Clubs was similar to those of the Karrakatta Club. In 1923 it was decided by the members of the Karrakatta Club to align the Club with the international movement of Lyceum Clubs. This opened the Karrakatta Club to a wider contact with women all over the world.
Edith Dircksey Cowan (MBE), was an Australian politician, social campaigner and the first woman elected to an Australian parliament. Cowan was the first secretary of the Karrakatta Club in 1894, subsequently becoming the Club's president between 1910 and 1912.
Marion Phoebe Holmes, daughter of Henry Diggins Holmes, the General Manager of the Bank of Western Australia. She was a key figure in the Ministering Children's League and the Western Australian Branch of The Girls' Friendly Society. Holmes was a founding member of the Karrakatta Club.
Gertrude Ella Mead, the third woman doctor registered in Western Australia and an inaugural member of the Senate of the University of Western Australia. She was the daughter of Silas Mead. Mead was the vice-president of the Karrakatta Club between 1912 and 1914.[8]
^Robin, Myriam (21 June 2021). "Perth's Weld Club laid bare". Australian Financial Review. Archived from the original on 21 June 2021. Retrieved 22 May 2022.
"KarraKatta Club (1894–)". Australian Women. National Foundation for Australian Women. Retrieved 25 May 2006.
Cowan, Peter (1978). A unique position: a biography of Edith Dircksey Cowan 1861–1932. Nedlands, Western Australia: University of Western Australia Press. ISBN0-85564-135-5.
Further reading
Mitchell, Judy; Karrakatta Club (1994). History of the Karrakatta Club, 1894–1994. Perth: Karrakatta Club. OCLC222762673.
Kloser, Eliza (11 April 2024). "Discrimination ruling over Mona's Ladies Lounge raise questions about women-only, men-only spaces". ABC News. Australian Broadcasting Corporation. Retrieved 11 April 2024. Men-only and women-only social clubs are allowed under a specific exemption about 'clubs' which can discriminate based on gender for the benefit of club and that it is provided to both men and women separately.