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Mabel Mary McCutcheon MBE born Mabel Woolgar aka Mabel Mary Franks (13 April 1886 – 30 December 1942) was a British born
Australia Australia, officially the Commonwealth of Australia, is a Sovereign state, sovereign country comprising the mainland of the Australia (continent), Australian continent, the island of Tasmania, and numerous List of islands of Australia, sma ...
n nurse who established health facilities at the
Port Adelaide Port Adelaide is a port-side region of Adelaide, approximately northwest of the Adelaide CBD. It is also the namesake of the City of Port Adelaide Enfield council, a suburb, a federal and state electoral division and is the main port for the ...
Central Methodist Mission Central Methodist Mission my refer to: * The Albert Street Uniting Church Albert Street Uniting Church is a heritage-listed church at 319 Albert Street (on the corner of Ann Street), Brisbane City, City of Brisbane, Queensland, Australia. I ...
which is now called UnitingSA.


Life

McCutcheon was born in Sussex at Hangleton in 1885. Her parents were Jemima Florence (born Coles) and Alfred Woolgar. Her father was a skilled blacksmith. She qualified as a nurse and she then worked in London, Dublin and New York. When the first world war started she joined the Queen Alexandra's Imperial Military Nursing Service and she was posted to France, Egypt and Greece. In 1917 she married an Australian soldier named Wilfred Henry Franks and she became a War bride. By the time she arrived in Adelaide on board the SS Megantic in 1920 she had a baby daughter. The marriage however ended in divorce in 1922 and at about the same time she registered as a nurse in Australia. The same year she was employed as a matron and by 1925 she married a Methodist minister and social worker at the manse in Payneham, South Australia. She and Reverend Arthur McCutcheon had a son late that year. In 1935 her husband began to lead the Port Adelaide Central Methodist Mission which had started in 1919. With Mabel's help it became an important resource occupying nine buildings in central Port Adelaide costing £120 a month to run. Mabel's contribution were based on her health background. One of her initiatives was to buy a ray machine foe £17 which she too around to her patients. Her approach included the supply of health foods including free apples, unpolished rice and barley, cracked wholewheat, vegetable juice and soya beans. She was interested in the endemic rheumatoid arthritis suffered by poor old people. In time the clinic employed skilled therapists in physiotherapy and chiropody. The clinic had the latest electrical devicies so that "healorays" could be used to alleviate symptoms. In 1939 her work was recognised when she became a
Member of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire The Most Excellent Order of the British Empire is a British order of chivalry, rewarding contributions to the arts and sciences, work with charitable and welfare organisations, and public service outside the civil service. It was established o ...
. By 1941 she was arranging for deprived families to have a break at a health camp that she had created at Mount Barker.


Death and legacy

McCutcheon died in 1942 in North Adelaide. Her husband remarried. The mission named its clinic the Mabel Mary McCutcheon Memorial. The mission continued and in 2017 it changed its name to UnitingSA.


References


External links


Biography at ADB
{{DEFAULTSORT:McCutcheon, Mabel Mary 1886 births 1942 deaths People from Brighton and Hove British military nurses People from Adelaide Australian Members of the Order of the British Empire