• Entry type: Person
  • Entry ID: AWE0654

Miller, Emma

  • Maiden name Holmes, Emma
    Former married name Calderwood, Emma
    Former married name Silcock, Emma
(1839 – 1917)
  • Born 26 June 1839, Chesterfield, Derbyshire, England
  • Died 22 January 1917, Toowoomba, Queensland, Australia
  • Occupation Suffragist, Union organiser, Women's rights activist

Summary

Emma Miller was foundation president of the Woman’s Equal Franchise Association between 1894 and 1905. The vote for women in Queensland State elections was finally won in 1905; women had had the right to vote in Federal elections since Federation, and voted for the first time in the 1903 Federal election. On 2 February 1912, known as Black Friday, at the height of a general strike, Miller led a contingent of women to Parliament House, avoiding police with fixed bayonets. The women were charged by baton swinging police on their return from Parliament House. Miller reputedly stuck her hatpin into a horse ridden by the Police Commissioner, Patrick Cahill. Cahill fell from his horse and claimed to have been permanently injured. Direct political action was not Miller’s only cause. She was anti-militarist and opposed conscription in World War I. She believed that ‘those who make the quarrel should be the only ones to fight’. As vice-president of the Women’s Peace Army, Miller attended the Peace Alliance Conference in Melbourne in 1916. She also fought hard for free speech and civil liberties. During the First World War, Miller preached equal pay to those fearing that women would take the jobs of men away at the war.

Events

  • 1970

    Married Jabez Mycroft Silcock (dec.), they had four children

  • 1970

    Married William Calderwood (dec. 1880)

  • 1970

    Migrated to Brisbane

  • 1970

    Married Andrew Miller (dec. 1897)

  • 1970

    Helped to form a female workers’ union

  • 1970

    Gave evidence to the Royal Commission into Shops, Factories and Workshops

  • 1970

    Marched with shearers’ strike prisoners when released

  • 1970 - 1905

    Foundation president of the Woman’s Equal Franchise Association

  • 2012

    Led a contingent of women to Parliament House on ‘Black Friday’

  • 1903

    President of the Women Workers’ Political Union

  • 1908

    Delegate to the Commonwealth Labor conference

  • 2017

    The flag at Brisbane’s Trade Hall flew at half mast when Emma Miller died

  • 2022

    A publicly funded marble bust was unveiled in the Trades Hall

  • 1916

    Delegate to the Australian Peace Alliance conference

  • 1916 - 1917

    Campaigned against the conscription referendums

Archival resources

  • National Library of Australia
    • [Biographical cuttings on Emma Miller, suffragette, containing one or more cuttings from newspapers or journals]
  • John Oxley Library, Manuscripts and Business Records Collection
    • OM64-13 Workers Educational Association of Queensland Records 1913-1932

Published resources

Related entries


  • Related Organisations
    • Women's Peace Army (1915 - 1919)
  • Presided
    • Women Workers' Political Organisation (1903 - )
    • Women's Equal Franchise Association (1894 - 1905)
  • Related Exhibitions
    • Women in Australia's Working History (2002 - )
  • Membership
    • Workers' Educational Association of Queensland (1913 - 1932)