Mr James Cowan

Edith Cowan’s name is familiar to most Australians. She has a federal electorate named after her, as well as a university. Her face appears on the $50 banknote. But her husband James Cowan is almost forgotten.

Edith’s fame is well deserved. In 1921 she became the first woman to be elected to an Australian parliament when she won the state seat of West Perth. But prior to her election she had spent a lifetime working to improve the rights and welfare of men, women and children in her home state of Western Australia.

As I was writing The Edward Street Baby Farm, I was conscious of Edith Cowan’s tireless activities in the background of all that went on. She was on the committee which, in 1890, set up the House of Mercy, a home for “fallen women”. The home unwittingly provided baby farmer Alice Mitchell with many of her clients.

Mrs Cowan was also on the committee which established the Children’s Protection Society in 1906. That organisation took a keen interest in the Alice Mitchell case and its outcome.

Edith and James Cowan in a garden in the 1920a
Edith and James Cowan in the 1920s
(Photo from wikimedia)

The reluctant public servant

But it was James Cowan who played the most prominent role in the Edward Street story. He was the police magistrate who in 1907 found himself appointed as acting coroner for the inquest into the death of Baby Booth. It was he who sent Alice Mitchell to trial for murder.

It was not a role he took on willingly. In fact, according to Peter Cowan (his grandson and Edith Cowan’s biographer) James was a diligent but reluctant public servant all his life. Had life played out differently for him, he would have preferred to live in the country and run his own farm.

James Cowan grew up in a rural area. His father, Walkinshaw Cowan, arrived in the Swan River colony in 1839, as secretary to Governor Hutt, and married locally-born Elizabeth Dyer in 1842. Not long after James’ birth in Perth in 1848, his parents moved all their belongings by bullock cart to York. There his father took up the role of Native Protector and Justice of the Peace.

At the age of sixteen, James was appointed post master and secretary to the Bench of Magistrates in York. In 1870, he moved to Perth to become clerk to Police Magistrate Landor. That began a career as a public servant which often involved him filling several roles simultaneously.

At one point he became part owner of a cattle station with his brother. But his dream of being a farmer and working on the land never came to fruition.

Marriage to Edith

James met Edith Dircksey Brown, his future wife, while she was a student at a boarding school run by his sisters. They married in November 1879, not long after he became Registrar to the Supreme Court. He was thirty, Edith was eighteen.

Their marriage lasted until Edith’s death in 1932. While Edith had to overcome the prevailing attitude that women were not suited to public life, James faced the less obvious problem of being a husband publicly out-shone by his wife. Despite the jibes he sometimes suffered, and the unspoken mocking, he supported her with good humour and provided the stability that she needed in her hectic life.

Cartoon of Mr James Cowan by Pas, 10 Mar 1907
Cartoon from Truth newspaper, 10 Mar 1907

During the 1907 inquest, acting coroner Cowan sometimes came across as uncertain and prone to making gaffs. As a police magistrate, he had a dry wit, but often seemed unsympathetic to those who appeared before the bench. But Peter Cowan’s biography of his grandmother suggests that, while Edith was respected by all, it was James who held the family together and elicited the lasting affection of his grandchildren.

Augusta Heinbockel

Augusta Heinbockel was born in 1855 in Melbourne, the daughter of German immigrants, Heinrich and Anna Heinbockel. Tall and always elegantly dressed, she was a woman of many talents and interests. She gained some fame, and even notoriety, in Australia at the turn of the 20th century. But like many adventurous women who died childless, she is now forgotten.

Her name appeared frequently in the social columns in Melbourne from the early 1890s. She became well known for her performances as a dramatist, pianist, public speaker and supporter of the suffragists. As an actress, she sometimes appeared under the name “Miss Lindt.” She opened her own drama school for children in 1893.

The Age (Melbourne) 10 Feb 1894

In 1896, after the death of her father left her with a modest fortune, she moved to Perth. Here she wrote and produced her own plays. None of them seem to have survived, but newspaper reports at the time suggest many of them were rather dramatic and often featured not-too-subtle messages about social issues.

She opened another drama school for children in Perth. In 1898 she staged a children’s operetta, Red Riding Hood’s Temptation, which she had written herself. The child performers were all from St Alban’s church in Highgate, and the proceeds went towards the cost of building choir stalls for the church. The operetta proved so popular that she staged repeat performances at the Town Hall a few days later and several times the following year.

Newspaper photo of the cast of Red Riding Hood's Temptation
The cast of Red Riding Hood’s Temptation, Western Mail, 9 June 1899

Under the name of Cush Heinbockel, she wrote articles for the social gossip newspaper, Table Talk. Her relationship with the newspaper soured in August 1897, when she successfully took the proprietors to court to recover payments owed to her for her work.

Arrested as a spy

When the first West Australian troops went to South Africa in 1899, to fight the Boers alongside the British army, she tried to enlist as a nurse. Her offer was refused due to her lack of experience. So, she travelled to South Africa at her own expense and began working as a journalist. Despite being told by the authorities to stay away from the front, she went to Ladysmith soon after the siege there, to see what was happening.

This, along with her German name, led to her being arrested as a Boer spy. Her captors brought her before General Redvers Buller, the brusque commander of the British forces, who she described as ‘very rude’. He told her that he could send her to St Helena, as a prisoner of war. She told him that she’d be happy to go, it would provide her with plenty of material to report.

In the end, the army provided an escort to take her back to Durban, with strict instructions not to leave the port except to return to Australia. She returned to Fremantle in June 1900 with some of the troops.

She soon put her experiences to use by giving lectures at the Athenaeum in Melbourne, and then in Sydney. Her talks were illustrated with 150 slides of photos she had taken in South Africa. And as was often the case at this time, musical items performed by popular ‘artistes’ supported her appearance. Around this time she began to call herself “Augusta von Saurmann Heinbockel”, though there’s no record of her parents using this extended surname. The lectures proved very popular.

Advertisement for lecture given by Miss Augusta Saurmann Heinbockel at the Athenaeum in Melbourne.

A few years later, finding life in Australia a little dull, and her talents unappreciated, she left for London. She took with her a younger woman, Eva Delaney, who seems to have become her life-long companion. They both found work writing for newspapers in London and then the United States. In New York, Augusta gave lectures about Australia.

In 1913, Miss Heinbockel, now calling herself “Miss Deniliquin”, was giving lectures in Britain, on behalf of the Australian government. Her task was to encourage women to emigrate. The outbreak of war with Germany once again led to her name arousing suspicion. Questions were asked in Parliament about why she was being employed, and she lost that role. After further adventures in Europe, she died in London in 1937.

The story of Augusta’s travels and misadventures in South Africa piqued my interest. Unfortunately, I haven’t been able to find any trace of her lectures or slides in any archive in Australia or Britain. Without them, I have only brief newspaper accounts of her life.


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