Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

Paquita Mawson

Australian community worker and writer From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Remove ads

Francisca Adriana "Paquita" Mawson OBE (née Delprat; 19 August 1891 – 26 May 1974) was an Australian charity worker and biographer. Having married geologist and Antarctic explorer Sir Douglas Mawson in 1914, she was also known as Lady Mawson.

Quick facts Francisca Adriana MawsonOBE, Born ...
Remove ads

Early life and education

Francisca Adriana Delprat, known as "Paquita" (a diminutive of Francisca[1]) from a young age, was born in Acton, London, on 19 August 1891 of Dutch parents. She was daughter of Henrietta Marie Wilhelmine Sophia (née Jas) and engineer Guillaume Daniel Delprat,[2] who later became general manager of BHP and established its reputation as the leading steelmaker in Australia.[3] The family soon moved to Andalusia in Spain, where Delprat worked until accepting a job with BHP and migrating to Australia in 1898.[2]

Mawson was educated at a convent school in Broken Hill, but the family moved to Adelaide in 1902, where she attended Tormore House School. Leaving school in 1908, she attended the Elder Conservatorium of Music, learning piano and singing.[2]

Remove ads

Life and work

Summarize
Perspective

Mawson met her future husband, geologist and Antarctic explorer Sir Douglas Mawson, at Broken Hill in late 1910 when he was undertaking geological expeditions there, and their courtship continued in her other family home in Tynte Street, North Adelaide, where her mother stayed while the children studied at school and university. They endured a long separation while he was away in the Antarctic on the Australasian Antarctic Expedition from December 1909 until December 1913, during which time they wrote letters to each other, many of which were not received until his return.[4] They married on 31 March 1914 at Holy Trinity Church of England, Balaclava, Victoria.[5] After Douglas was knighted in 1914, Paquita became Lady Francisca Adriana Mawson.[6]

Leaving their first daughter Patricia (1915–1999; later a leading zoologist and parasitologist) with her mother in Melbourne, she sailed to England, where Douglas was working for the Ministry of Munitions. She supported him with secretarial work and also prepared hospital dressings. Their second child, Jessica Paquita "Quita" Mawson (1917–2004; married name McEwin), who became a bacteriologist,[7] was born in London.[6]

After WWI ended, they came back to Australia and settled in Adelaide.[2] After renting a home in Brighton while getting their home built on a plot of land owned by her father, the family moved into their new home, "Jerbii" in King Street, Brighton, in 1920. The Mawsons lived in Brighton until at least 1958, when Douglas died.[4] Paquita Mawson, among her many other activities, was instrumental in establishing Hopetoun School, which operated out of the parish hall at St Jude's Anglican Church.[8]

She also joined and participated in the University Wives' Club, the Lyceum Club and the Queen Adelaide Club. She served as president of the Mothers' and Babies' Health Association and actively promoted baby care across the state. She also raised funds for a various causes, sometimes by using her organising skills to arrange concerts.[9]

As a member of the Australian Red Cross Society during WWII,[6] Mawson ran extensive appeals for clothing donations. The branch was responsible for sending over 3,000 cases of clothing to the UK. Her welfare work included assisting women and children who were brought to Australia as refugees. She established a club for refugees from the Dutch East Indies (now Indonesia).[9]

She wrote a biography of her father titled A Vision of Steel: The Life of G. D. Delprat. It was published by Cheshire in 1958 and reviewed on the "Red Page" The Bulletin and elsewhere.[10] Following her husband's death, she wrote about him in Mawson of the Antarctic, published in 1964 by Longman in London.[11]

Remove ads

Recognition

In 1946 Mawson was appointed an Officer of the Order of Orange-Nassau in 1946 for her work with refugees from the Dutch East Indies.[9]

In 1951 she was recognised for her social welfare work in the 1951 Birthday Honours, becoming an Officer of the Order of the British Empire.[12]

Death and legacy

Mawson died on 26 May 1974. She was buried alongside her husband at St Jude's Anglican Church, Brighton, South Australia.[13]

A portrait of Mawson, painted by Ingrid Erns in the late 1940s, is held in the National Portrait Gallery in Canberra.[6] She was the subject of her great-nephew Paul Delprat's 1966 Archibald entry, Lady Paquita Mawson.[14]

A typescript of A Vision of Steel, along with many personal letters pertaining to her family, are held by the National Library in Canberra.[15]

Remove ads

References

Further reading

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads