Stella Casey
Dame Stella Katherine Casey DBE (née Wright; 22 May 1924 – 7 July 2000) was a New Zealand campaigner for social issues as well as a prominent member of various national organisations. Early life and familyStella Katherine Wright was born in New Plymouth on 22 May 1924, the daughter of Stella Regina Wright (née Hickey, 1887–1973), a schoolteacher prior to her wedding, and William James Wright (1883–1959).[1][2][3] She was a Roman Catholic. She was raised at her family dairy farm in Taranaki[4] and was educated at Opunake District High School, and Sacred Heart College, Christchurch.[3] She went on to study at Victoria University College from 1947, graduating Bachelor of Arts in 1948.[3] In 1948, she married Maurice Eugene Casey, a lawyer and later Judge in the Court of Appeal,[4] who was born in 1923.[5] The couple had either nine[5] or ten[6] children (sources vary). Community activitiesCasey was a member of the Catholic Women's League,[7] the National Council of Women,[8] the Christchurch Polytechnic Council and the New Zealand branch of the Federation of University Women. She compiled a history of the Catholic Women's League of New Zealand which was published just after her death in 2000.[9][10] She started her first campaign in 1969 in Browns Bay on Auckland's East Coast Bays when she objected to pornography being on display in shops; this resulted in a nationwide debate.[1] She also lobbied against the use of drugs, raising the issue with local politicians[11] and writing an article titled "Drugs and the Young New Zealander"[12] for the Catholic Women's League in the Diocese of Auckland Publications.[13] Honours and awardsIn the 1991 New Year Honours, Casey was appointed a Dame Commander of the Order of the British Empire, for services to the community.[14] Later that year, in the Queen's Birthday Honours, her husband, by then a Court of Appeal judge, was appointed a Knight Bachelor.[15] In 1993, Stella Casey was awarded the New Zealand Suffrage Centennial Medal.[16] DeathCasey died in Wellington on 7 July 2000, aged 76.[1] Her husband died in 2012.[6] References
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