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Marion
Miller was born at Woods Point, Victoria on 8 August 1865 to Irish
immigrants. Educated privately, she spent many years as a relief teacher
throughout Victoria before her marriage to Joseph Knowles a Melbourne city
valuator on 19 September 1901; they later separated and she raised their two
children. Encouraged by the editor of The Australasian David
Watterston (Boroondara Cemetery), she found great solace in writing as a
creative outlet during her time when her teaching isolated her from family
and friends and she soon began to contribute poems and sketches on nature,
children, love, death and country life as ‘John Desmond’. Her mainstream
works celebrated Catholicity but were little received by the reading public
and included the novels “Barbara Halliday” (1896), “Corinne of
Corrall’s Bluff” (1912), “The little doctor” (1919), “The
house of the garden of roses” (1923) and “Meg of Minadong”
(1926). She also published a collection of tales in “Shamrock and wattle
bloom” (1900), as well as two volumes of verse with “Songs from the
hills” (1898) and “Fronds from the Blacks’ Spur” (1911). In
September 1899, Knowles began writing a women’s column with the Catholic
weekly Advocate (1899-1927) founded by Samuel Winter (1843-1904) and
later a children’s section under ‘Aunt Patsy’; on her retirement in 1927,
the paper was instrumental in raising funds for the purchase of a house in
Kew. In addition to her writings, she played a leading part in the
organisation of the Catholic laity as foundation president of the Catholic
Women’s Club (1913) and also through the formation of the social club for
single Catholics. She was also honorary secretary of the committee for St.
Joseph’s Home for Destitute Children in Surrey Hills. Awarded the M.B.E in
1938, Knowles died on 6 September 1949 survived by her two sons. |
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(above) Marion Knowles
(By permission of the
National
Library of Australia, nla.pic-an24041715)

(above) Monumental
Headstone (enlarge
image) |