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Doris Booth

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Doris Booth
Booth in 1939
Nominated Member of the Legislative Council
In office
1951–1957
Personal details
Born1 October 1895
Brisbane, Queensland
Died4 November 1970(1970-11-04) (aged 75)
Brisbane, Australia
ProfessionNurse, miner

Doris Regina Booth OBE (1 October 1895 – 4 November 1970) was an Australian nurse and goldminer. She was the first female member of the Legislative Council of Papua and New Guinea.

Biography

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Booth was born to Henry Wilde and Minna Gerler in South Brisbane in 1895.[1] Following her school education she started work at Brisbane General Hospital as a trainee nurse.[1] She left her job after marrying Charles Booth on 14 May 1919.[1] The couple lived in Mitchell for a year, after which they moved to the Territory of New Guinea when her husband was appointed manager of a plantation near Kokopo.[1]

In 1924 Booth and her husband moved to Bulolo to prospect for gold. After securing a lease, Booth ran it whilst her husband started prospecting at Edie Creek. She set up a bush hospital in September 1926 following a dysentery epidemic, running it until January 1927;[1] this led to her being appointed an OBE in the 1929 Birthday Honours.[2] Between 1927 and 1929 Booth returned to live in Australia to recover from Malaria, publishing a book about her experiences under the title Mountain Gold and Cannibals.[3][1] She then went back to New Guinea and left her husband in 1932;[1] the two divorced in 1934.[3]

After a successful spell running a mine, Booth returned to Brisbane again in 1938 and worked for the Mothercraft Association.[1] She subsequently returned to New Guinea and was appointed to the new Legislative Council of Papua and New Guinea in 1951, serving as its sole female member until 1957.[1]

In 1960 Booth returned to Australia and worked as a volunteer for the Methodist Blue Nursing Service. She died at the St Andrews War Memorial Hospital in 1970.[1]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Booth, Doris Regina (1895–1970) Australian Dictionary of Biography
  2. ^ "Mrs Doris Booth". It's An Honour. Archived from the original on 8 October 2021. Retrieved 8 October 2021.
  3. ^ a b First woman on the NG goldfields Pacific Islands Monthly, December 1970, p137