In her late-life autobiography, Scottish-born Australian educationist writer and political reformer, Catherine Helen Spence (1825–1910), recognised the rich and sustaining interconnections of her life – its progress and development from early womanhood to becoming ‘the Grand Old Woman of Australia’ (Magarey v) – with the establishment and advancement of the South Australian colony to which she emigrated with her parents in 1839: ‘[s]itting down at the age of 84 to give an account of my life, I feel that it connects itself naturally with the growth and development of the province of South Australia, to which I came with my family . . . before it was quite three years old’ (1).1 This identification with South Australia and its evolution is a recurring idea that colours her thinking on children’s education and its centrality to collective moral, social and economic improvement.
This essay seeks to illustrate the overlooked role Spence’s…