|
The wife of
James McKinley (q.v.), Janet
Mitchel McKinley nee Smith was featured in the Brighton Southern Cross:
"When the Victorian
chapters of the part - the great and worthy part - Australia has played in
the present terrible war comes to be written, many pages will be necessary
in which to give in detail the noble work done by the womenfolk of the
State. These have been drawn from all phases and sections of the
community. Elderly, middle-aged and young women alike have done their
full share in the prosecution of the war to a righteous end, and in
ameliorating the conditions of trench life and alleviating the sufferings of
the legions of brave, patriotic Anzacs who have bled for king and country.
The noble dead we may not recall. The vacant chairs at hundreds of
firesides can never again be filled by their old occupants. These can
only be kept green in the memory of the community. What can be done,
and what is still being done by the women of Victoria is to endeavour to rob
war of some of its miseries and suffering.
Mrs. J. McKinley, of "Ibwiri,"
New-street, is one of those citizenesses [sic] who are devoting the greater
part of their lives to the betterment of war conditions. From the day
war was declared, nearly three years ago, she realised that it was her duty
to do everything in her power to aid the State in which she lived to bear
itself honourably in, and to a victorious end of, the great struggle for
liberty and a universal, enduring and honourable peace. Though born in
Ayrshire, Scotland, Mrs. McKinley came to Victoria with her parents as Janet
Mitchel Smith when only four years old. Her father was veterinary
surgeon with the Marquis of Bute, and it was on the death of the marquis
that Mr. Mitchel Smith came out to Victoria to practice his profession.
The family lived first in East Melbourne, where Miss Janet received her
earlier education at Miss Stone's school. Then followed two years at a
training college. She entered on married life as the wife of Mr. James
McKinley, who for many years was connected with Melbourne newspaper
enterprise. He was one of a syndicate that acquired first the "Daily
Telegraph" and "Weekly Times,: and later on "The Herald." Mr. McKinley
was also one of the proprietors of "Punch." More than twenty years
have passed since Mrs. McKinley entered on her public activities. It
was this lady, too, who initiated the first gymnastic class in connection
with Sunday schools throughout Victoria. The first class was held in
Wilson-street. The Brighton Ladies' Swimming Club, the first
association of its kind in Victoria, owes its establishment to Mrs.
McKinley. As a delegate from the Brighton club, Mrs. McKinley took a
stand for the exclusion of men folk from displays by the girls, but the
Victorian and New South Wales Associations declined to support that
principle. The Brighton club, however, owes much of its success to its
endorsement of Mrs. McKinley's suggestion, which is a distinctinctive [sic]
feature of the club displays. That was 21 years ago, and she has been
its secretary ever since. Mrs. McKinley frequently travels as matron
in charge of nurses on the special elaborately fitted hospital trains which
take the S.A. and N.S.W. wounded soldiers home on the arrival of hospital
shops in Melbourne. She is a member of the committee of the Rest Home
for Soldiers on the St. Kilda-road, and commandant of the Voluntary Air
Detachment of the Brighton Red Cross Society. Mrs. McKinley must here
find plenty of work to her hand. Her demonstrations of ambulance work
must make no small demand on her time and energies. "I am out every
night demonstrating. Even during the few hours I spend at home, there
come frequent calls on the telephone." That is the calm, quiet way in
which she sums up that phase of her patriotic and useful activities.
As divisional superintendent of nursing this lady has charge of 40 girls of
the Brighton district. A group picture taken during the recent
Brighton Carnival shows Mrs. McKinley in the centre in her nursing costume,
and with the bodice of her apron bearing the symbolical Red Cross.
Possessed of that "soft low voice" - concerning which there is the
Shakespearian assurance that it is "an excellent thing in woman" - with a
quiet, gentle manner, yet withal self-contained, in the truest womanly
interpretation of the term, it is easy to understand how acceptable an
acquisition Mrs. McKinley must be to a nursing association.
"I am a strong Liberal
and an uncompromising Imperialist," replies this lady when asked regarding
her politics. It is somewhat in the nature of surplusage to put such a
query, in view of the knowledge that Mrs. McKinley had all along done so
much to assist the Win-the-War Party, and this not alone on the political
side, but from the higher altitude of maintenance of Empire.
Mrs. McKinley, who has
been a widow for some years, has also had the misfortune to lose her eldest
son, Lieut. James Gordon McKinley, who, directly the war broke out, enlisted
in England with the Flying Corps, and was subsequently transferred to the
Royal Artillery, and lost his life when rescuing a brother officer [ed-Ypres
on 4 June 1915 aged 31]. Lieut Harry McKinley was selected to go to
Cambridge, and succeeded in securing his commission whilst Sergeant Gilbert
McKinley, who left Australia with the West Australian 11th Battalion, won
his commission and a military medal for services in the field. Though
three sons have gone from "Ibwiri" to help to uphold the honour of the land
of the Southern Cross, yet, withal, she does not show any public regret for
the loss of absence of her dear ones. She has realised, in common with
so many other Australian wives and mothers, what she needs of the Empire
are, as also that a man cannot die better than when fighting for King and
Country".
Janet McKinley lived to see the Empire
victorious, but not for long. She died on 10 August 1919 aged 70 years
and is buried with her husband. |

Monumental Headstone (enlarge
image) |