Florence Anderson (trade Unionist)
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Florence Anderson (; 1871–1949) was the first female trade union secretary in Victoria, Australia. Anderson was born in Bairnsdale, Victoria. She married John Anderson in 1911 and bore three children. After her husband died she became a cleaner, but according to the ''Biographical Register of the Australian Labour Movement 1788-1975'' she "rebelled from expectation that cleaners take office towels home to launder" and joined the Female Office Cleaners Union part-time from 1916 and later became a full-time worker in 1919. In 1920 she was made the chair of the Worker's Board with Henry E. Bessell and Richard Brooks. Anderson was elected the Victorian Secretary of the
Miscellaneous Workers Union The Federated Miscellaneous Workers' Union (F.M.W.U.), commonly known as the 'Missos', was an Australian trade union which existed between 1915 and 1992. It represented an extremely diverse and disparate range of occupations, but its core suppor ...
(the "missos") in 1930, holding office until 1946. She was active in advocating for equal pay, in particular for cleaners who were often women and who worked long hours for little pay. In an interview for ''The Labor Call'', Anderson called them "Workers of the Dawn, and Dusk too", and that, She died at her home in Smith St, North Richmond on December 20, 1949 and was buried at
Burwood Cemetery Burwood Cemetery is a cemetery in Burwood, Victoria in Australia. It dates back to 1858, and was originally known as Nunawading General Cemetery. It is known as a resting place of notable figures from Melbourne. The site is operated by Greater M ...
.


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Anderson, Florence Trade unionists from Melbourne 1871 births 1949 deaths 19th-century Australian women 20th-century Australian women