Marie Byles

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Marie Beuzeville Byles
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Marie at Graduation, University of Sydney
Born (1900-04-08)8 April 1900
Ashton upon Mersey, Cheshire, England
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Cheltenham, New South Wales, Australia
Residence Cheltenham, New South Wales
Nationality Australian
Education Presbyterian Ladies' College, Sydney
Pymble Ladies' College
Alma mater University of Sydney (BA 1921, LLB 1924)
Occupation Solicitor and author
Known for First practising female solicitor in N.S.W, pacifist, mountaineer, explorer, feminist, author and conservationist

Marie Beuzeville Byles (8 April 1900 – 21 November 1979) was a committed conservationist, pacifist, the first practising female solicitor in New South Wales (NSW), mountaineer, explorer and avid bushwalker, feminist, journalist, and an original member of the Buddhist Society in New South Wales. She was also a travel and non-fiction writer.[1][2]

Life

The eldest of three children, Marie was born in 1900[3] in Ashton upon Mersey in what was then Cheshire, England, to progressive-minded parents. Her younger brothers were David John Byles[4] and Baldur Unwin Byles (1904–1975).[5][3] Her parents were Unitarian Universalists, Fabian socialists and pacifists. Her mother Ida Margaret, née Unwin,[2] was a suffragette and had studied at The Slade School of Fine Art, until "her artistic talents were lost to the drudgery of housekeeping",[6] and who impressed upon her daughter the necessity of being financially independent of men. Her father, Cyril Beuzeville Byles was a railway signal engineer.[7] In England he involved his children in campaigns against fences that prevented public access for recreational walks.[8]

The family moved to Australia in 1911 because Cyril Byles was appointed Chief Signals Engineer with the New South Wales Government Railways, to design the signal system for electrifying the railway system.[3] They found a block of land in Beecroft and in 1913 built a house there which they named 'Chilworth'. The family spent summers by the sea, and in 1913 they also built a small cottage at Palm Beach, on Sunrise Hill facing the lighthouse.[6]

Marie was educated at Beecroft Primary School, and at the Presbyterian Ladies' College, Sydney at Croydon from 1914–1915, and in 1916 and 1917 at the new second campus of the school at Pymble (now known as Pymble Ladies' College). She excelled, and became a prefect and dux of the school in 1916, and Head Prefect and dux the following year.[8] At matriculation, she won an Exhibition to the University of Sydney.[3]

Marie Byles never married, had no children, and considered it a waste of potential when her friend Dot Butler chose to have children rather than continue with mountaineering full time.[9]

In 1932 she joined The Women's Club, which was created in Sydney in 1901 to provide a place where women "interested in public, professional, scientific and artistic work" could meet.[10]

First female solicitor

Marie was one of a small number of women to attend the University of Sydney. She graduated with a Bachelor of Arts in 1921 and in 1924 she completed a Bachelor of Laws degree and became the first woman to be admitted as a solicitor in New South Wales.[8][11] Although Ada Evans had graduated in law in 1902, it had been illegal for a woman to practise law in Australia until 1918. After clerking for four years, in 1929 Marie set up a legal practice, the first woman to do so in New South Wales.[6]

Marie operated two law practices — one in Eastwood and the other in the central Sydney.[8] She gave young women opportunities to participate in the profession. 'The business in Eastwood built up because she had the reputation of getting things done so quickly and that was almost unknown in a legal office, she was notorious.' (Employee, Ruth Milton).[12] She worked mainly on conveyancing and probate, and also to ensure just divorce settlements for female clients.[3] She retired and handed over the legal practice to a partner in 1970.[6]

Journalist and speaker

As a student, Marie wrote and published articles on legal, political, and environmental subjects.[2] From 1927–1936 she had the position of legal correspondent for the Australian Women’s Mirror. She wrote articles against women changing their name on marriage, so as to protect their financial assets. As legal correspondent she brought attention to laws and court practices that discriminated against women.[3] She gave lectures for the Australian League of Nations Union and wrote pamphlets for The United Associations of Women.[2]

Conservationist

As a teenager at her family's holiday retreat at Palm Beach, Marie would look through her telescope across Broken Bay to the bushland beyond on the Central Coast. The area was marked on maps as Bouddi, an aboriginal name meaning nose. It was a coal reserve visited only by fishermen. In 1920 Marie and some of her university friends set out to walk through the bush of Bouddi to Maitland Bay, then known as 'Boat Harbour', where they camped. It became a favourite spot for them. The only bushwalking club at the time was The Mountain Trails Club led by Myles Dunphy, which did not admit women.[8] By 1929, there was an increasing focus on organised recreation for the city and suburban population and Marie joined the two-year-old 'Sydney Bushwalkers Club'. In 1930, a new name for Boat Harbour was proposed by the Club; bushwalker Dorothy Lawry suggested "Maitland Bay" after the steamer that was wrecked at the northern end of the beach in 1889.[13]

Over the next five years, with the support of the Federation of Sydney Bushwalkers Clubs, Marie successfully campaigned in the press for the area to be placed under public ownership. The creation of Bouddi Natural Park in 1935 was a landmark achievement for the early conservationists. The Lands Department set aside an even larger area than Marie had proposed.[8] Marie Byles was elected a trustee of the board that managed the park, and for many years organized volunteers to clear and maintain its walking tracks.[8]

Explorer

In 1927–28, Marie had saved enough money from working for four years as a law clerk to take a year off to travel.[3] She set off on a Norwegian cargo boat, and it is from this journey that she wrote her popular book By Cargo Boat and Mountain, published in 1931. Later she was periodically able to leave her law practice in the hands of partners, to climb mountains in Britain, Norway and Canada. In 1935 she climbed Mt Cook in New Zealand.[8] In 1938 she led a large expedition to Mt Sansato, in Western China near the Tibetan border. At times her party in China traveled with a military escort to protect them from bandits. Due to poor weather, the expedition failed to reach the summit, and Marie was bitterly disappointed.[8]

Buddhist

During her travels through Burma, China and Vietnam in 1938, Marie often chose to stay in temples, which brought her into direct contact with non-European cultures and religions. On her return, Marie renewed her interest in the teachings of Gandhi, and began exploring Buddhism. A collapsed foot arch meant that she was no longer able to walk long distances or climb, and she studied spirituality and meditation to find ways of dealing with her pain.[8]

Although she became interested in the Quaker denomination of Christianity, her ongoing interest in Buddhism meant that she was refused membership. Over the following years she spent a year in India, including the Himalayas, and made three trips to Burma and two trips to Japan. From these experiences she completed four books on Buddhism.[8]

Byles' home

File:Ahimsa 1.jpg
'Ahimsa', the house that Marie Byles built on the edge of Cheltenham, as it looked in 2015

By 1938 Marie left her family home in Beecroft and built her own house on bushland that she had bought in 1935 at the edge of nearby Cheltenham, adjacent to crown land.[14] She named it 'Ahimsa' after the term used by Gandhi meaning "harmlessness". The four-room simple cottage is built of fibro and sandstone, and the large north-facing verandah is primarily where Marie slept and lived in preference to the interior rooms. In addition to the house, Marie wanted to have a place on her land for groups to meet for discussions and meditation. By 1949, the 'Hut of Happy Omen' was complete, designed as an open sleepout with bunks and a large sandstone fireplace. She had another small house built next to 'Ahimsa' in 1975, called 'Sentosa' (a Malay language word meaning "peace and tranquility).

In 1970 Marie bequeathed her property to The National Trust of Australia (NSW), which she had helped in 1946 when she was the consulting solicitor who drafted the organisation's constitution.[3]

Death and legacy

Marie died at 'Ahimsa' in 1979.[2] In 1985 a dramatised documentary, A Singular Woman was made by Gillian Coote using text from an unpublished autobiography written by Byles, along with reenactments and commentary by friends.[15][6]

Works

  • By Cargo Boat and Mountain (1931)
  • Footprints of Gautama the Buddha (1957)
  • Journey into Burmese Silence (1962)
  • The Lotus and the Spinning Wheel (1963)
  • Paths to Inner Calm (1965)
  • A New Road to Ancient Truth, by Tenko Nishida and Ittoen Tenko-San, translated by Makoto Ohashi (introduction only)1971
  • Stand Straight without Strain (1978)
  • Many Lives in One, unpublished autobiography

See also

  • Dymphna Cusack, a lifelong friend after they met at Sydney University

Notes

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  12. As cited in Peterson (2005)
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References

  • Adelaide, Debra (1988) Australian women writers: a bibliographic guide, London, Pandora

External links