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==Early Life and Education==
==Early Life and Education==
Jamesina McKenna was born in Glasgow, Scotland in December 1885. Her father, a cab driver, had died three months before her birth. Her mother remarried in 1888. Jamesina left school aged 13-14 and was a hand-loom weaver and milliner until 1906 when she married John Anderson, an iron-milling machinist and a foreman at Singer's sewing machine factory. They had eight children, of whom six survived her<ref name="Herald">{{cite news |title=The woman Bailie who fought for young and old |accessdate=5 December 2018 |work=Glasgow Herald |date=7 Jun 1977}}</ref>. They lived in [[Maryhill]], [[Glasgow]].
Jamesina McKenna was born in Glasgow, Scotland in December 1885. Her father, a cab driver, had died three months before her birth. Her mother remarried in 1888. Jamesina left school aged 13-14 and was a hand-loom weaver and milliner until 1906 when she married John Anderson, an iron-milling machinist and a foreman at Singer's sewing machine factory. They had eight children, of whom six survived her<ref name="Herald">{{cite news |title=The woman Bailie who fought for young and old |accessdate=5 December 2018 |work=Glasgow Herald |url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=vpBAAAAAIBAJ&sjid=8qQMAAAAIBAJ&pg=2091%2C1221474|date=7 Jun 1977}}</ref>. They lived in [[Maryhill]], [[Glasgow]].


==Welfare and Workers' Rights==
==Welfare and Workers' Rights==

Revision as of 10:58, 5 December 2018

Jamesina Anderson
Born1885 (1885)
Glasgow, Scotland
Died1977 (aged 91–92)
Glasgow, Scotland
NationalityScottish
OccupationPolitician
Known forLocal Politics

Jamesina Anderson (1885 - 1977) was a politician, socialist, and advocate of the rights of working-class people, especially the elderly and children.

Early Life and Education

Jamesina McKenna was born in Glasgow, Scotland in December 1885. Her father, a cab driver, had died three months before her birth. Her mother remarried in 1888. Jamesina left school aged 13-14 and was a hand-loom weaver and milliner until 1906 when she married John Anderson, an iron-milling machinist and a foreman at Singer's sewing machine factory. They had eight children, of whom six survived her[1]. They lived in Maryhill, Glasgow.

Welfare and Workers' Rights

She was a founding member of the Maryhill Ward Committee in 1920 and was elected several times as chair, until it was disbanded following local government reconstruction in 1977[1][2]. She had a particular interest in the welfare of the elderly, organising fund-raising and holiday events for older people during her working life, and after she retired from the council [1][2][3][4].

Political Career

She was elected to Glasgow Town Council as a Labour Party Councillor for Maryhill in 1945, and represented Maryhill Ward 18 from 1945 - 1962. She was elected as magistrate in 1947, was a Baillie from 1947 - 1951, and served as a Police Court Judge for the burgh of Maryhill from 1951 [1][5][6]. On the council, she served on a variety of standing committees and was convenor of the Children's Committee [1][6][7]. She was also on the sub-committee for Boarding-Out, in which role she travelled to check on children who had been boarded-out to be looked after [1].

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f "The woman Bailie who fought for young and old". Glasgow Herald. 7 Jun 1977. Retrieved 5 December 2018.
  2. ^ a b {{cite book|last1=Mitchell |first1=Andrew S |title=The 18th Maryhill Ward Committee: A Backward Look |date=1975 |url=http://195.153.34.9/catalogue/person.aspx?code=NA18958&
  3. ^ "At Maryhill: Wartime Difficulties and Old Folks' Treat". The Western Leader. 20 April 1940.
  4. ^ "Maryhill Ward Committee's Old Folks' Treat". Maryhill Clarion. Nov 1949.
  5. ^ "Glasgow Appointments". The Scotsman. 7 Nov 1947.
  6. ^ a b City of Glasgow Corporation Diary 1945-1963. Glasgow Corporation.
  7. ^ "Progressives hope to win Maryhill". Glasgow Herald. 6 Jun 1960.