Cecile Storey
Cecile Storey
Main page
2534126

Cecile Storey

logo
Community Hub0 subscribers
What are your thoughts?
Be the first to start a discussion here.
Be the first to start a discussion here.
Cecile Storey

Cecile Storey AM (1933–1997) was an Australian teacher, lobbyist, internationalist, and feminist who was 'always ahead of her time'.

Cecile Storey was born in 1933 in Ballarat, Victoria, to Eunice (née Bowley), homemaker, and Charles Henry Benjamin, an engineer. The family moved to Melbourne during WW2, settling in Balwyn. Cecile and her two younger sisters attended the Methodist Ladies College in Kew.

She then did a Commerce Degree at Melbourne University, one of only five female students, with the aim of becoming a stockbroker. Graduating in 1955, she discovered to her dismay that stockbroking was a career that was unheard of for a woman in the 1950s, so after a short stint in marketing at car sale firm Preston Motors, she turned to teaching in independent schools. Her first post was at Camberwell Girls Grammar School, followed by Box Hill Grammar, then MLC, and from 1968 at Strathcona Baptist Girls Grammar in Canterbury, where she took generations of girls through the principles of government, commerce, and the law for over 20 years. In a pioneering move, she took her school politics class to Canberra each year to show them how Federal Government worked, as well as 'to annoy politicians'.

In 1958 she married barrister Haddon Storey (later to become a State MP and Attorney General), and they had three boys in the 1960s.

In 1967 she joined the United Nations Association of Australia, a charity devoted to promoting the work of that world body's activities, especially UNICEF, and she was later to take on a very active role.

Storey's frustrations with the barriers for women led her to do more in her profession than just teach. In the early 70s she joined what was then called the Assistant Mistresses Association (which later became the Victorian Association of Teachers in Independent Schools, now the Independent Education Union). Here she lobbied for equal pay with their male colleagues, along with maternity and long service leave, quickly rising to Vice President 1973-5 (and again 1979–80), and President (1981–2). Wanting to take her accrued long service leave in separate blocks to attend conferences from the mid 70s, she found that the Act allowed for it, pioneering a move that others following took for granted. She also developed curriculum for year 12, including units on Women and Local Government, Women and Politics, and Australia and the Third World, and became a year 12 examiner.

Her conviction that women should be treated equally to men, and knowledge that they were not, led to her joining the Women's Electoral Lobby from its inception in 1972. She attended their first conference in Canberra in 1974, and remained a member throughout her life.

Storey became an active member of the Family Planning Association, an organisation dedicated to helping ensure access to reproductive advice for women and girls. She joined the executive in 1977, and served as President 1981–84. She was described as a tireless advocate, ready to 'go in with all guns blazing'.

See all
User Avatar
No comments yet.