Mary Hyde

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Mary_Hyde an entity of type: Thing

ماري هايد (بالإنجليزية: Mary Hyde)‏ هي سيدة أعمال أسترالية، ولدت في 19 فبراير 1779 في Halesowen ‏ في المملكة المتحدة، وتوفيت في 1 ديسمبر 1864 في Botany ‏ في أستراليا. rdf:langString
Mary Lord nee Hyde (c. 19 February 1779 – 1 December 1864) was an English Australian woman who in the period 1855 to 1859 sued the Commissioners of the City of Sydney and won compensation for the sum of over £15,600 (plus costs) for the inundation of her property at Botany. rdf:langString
rdf:langString ماري هايد
rdf:langString Mary Hyde
rdf:langString Mary Hyde
rdf:langString Mary Hyde
rdf:langString "Banks House", Botany, Sydney, Australia
xsd:date 1864-12-01
rdf:langString Worcestershire, England
xsd:date 1779-02-19
xsd:integer 20864092
xsd:integer 1112168517
xsd:gMonthDay --02-19
xsd:integer 2
xsd:integer 8
rdf:langString
rdf:langString John Henry Black
rdf:langString Edward Lord
rdf:langString Thomas Lord
rdf:langString George William Lord
rdf:langString Francis Lord
rdf:langString Louisa Dick
rdf:langString Mary Ann De Mestrenee Black
rdf:langString Robert Charles Lord
rdf:langString Sarah Ann Ramsay
rdf:langString Simeon Lord Jnr.
rdf:langString nee Lord
xsd:date 1864-12-01
rdf:langString Mary Lord
rdf:langString Mary Hide, alias Sarah Blunn; Mary Black;
rdf:langString Edward Hyde
rdf:langString and Sarah Blunn
rdf:langString
rdf:langString ,
rdf:langString and her earlier partner was
rdf:langString ماري هايد (بالإنجليزية: Mary Hyde)‏ هي سيدة أعمال أسترالية، ولدت في 19 فبراير 1779 في Halesowen ‏ في المملكة المتحدة، وتوفيت في 1 ديسمبر 1864 في Botany ‏ في أستراليا.
rdf:langString Mary Lord nee Hyde (c. 19 February 1779 – 1 December 1864) was an English Australian woman who in the period 1855 to 1859 sued the Commissioners of the City of Sydney and won compensation for the sum of over £15,600 (plus costs) for the inundation of her property at Botany. Hyde is noted for her pertinacity. Despite in late 1855 partially winning her case through the New South Wales courts, Mary appealed and three years later in early 1859 won fully after taking her case as far as the Privy Council in England, the final court of appeal then available to a British subject living in the Colony of New South Wales. In 1859, in the 70-year-old Colony of New South Wales, her court case, although largely ignored by historians, was nevertheless an achievement: women did not have the vote; and Hyde lived in a male-dominated society governed by British law where women had little power. Married women had no power at all, and Mary was only able to sue as being a widow she was no longer married. Having experienced life as a woman in Victorian society, single, married and widowed, Mary became concerned with what today would be called a feminist issue. She stipulated in her will that any bequests made to her daughters and granddaughters were to be given to them in their own right and that their husbands should not have any say. She attempted to give her daughters and granddaughters control over their own inheritances. The law of the day overrode her stated wishes. Remembering that colonies in Australia were largely governed by English law, prior to the English 1887 Married Woman's Property Act (which was a rallying point for many first-wave feminists in the late nineteenth century, and was only passed after years of intense political lobbying by dedicated women) a married woman could own no property, and was the chattel of her husband. Any property that she had owned as a single woman, or that she inherited as a married woman whether in goods, money, or land, passed into the ownership of her husband.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 28713
rdf:langString Mary Lord
rdf:langString Mary Hide, alias Sarah Blunn; Mary Black;
xsd:gYear 1779
xsd:gYear 1864

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