Elizabeth Reid McCombs (née Henderson, 19 November 1873 – 7 June 1935) was a New Zealand politician of the Labour Party who in 1933 became the first woman elected to the New Zealand Parliament. New Zealand women gained the right to vote in 1893, though were not allowed to stand for the House of Representatives until the election of 1919.

Early years

McCombs was born in Kaiapoi, North Canterbury, New Zealand. She was one of the nine children of Alice and Daniel Henderson. The family spent some years living in Ashburton, but in about 1882 the family moved to Christchurch.

left|thumb|[[:en:Stella Henderson|Stella, Kathleen and Elizabeth (then) Henderson in the 1890s]]

In 1886, her alcoholic father died, leaving her family in financial difficulty for a time.

In 1921, McCombs gained election to the Christchurch City Council, being the second woman to do so. She remained a member of the council until 1935, when she chose to step down. During this time, she was also active in a large number of other organisations, including hospital boards and charities. Her work was recognised in 1926, when she was made a Justice of the peace.

Parliamentary career

On the death in August 1933 of McCombs' husband James, who had held his parliamentary seat of Lyttelton since 1913, it was suggested that Elizabeth McCombs herself should be the Labour Party's new candidate for the Lyttelton seat. Some members of the party were initially hesitant, but she was eventually selected as the Labour candidate. When the 1933 by-election was held on 13 September, McCombs won resoundingly: James had been returned by only 32 votes in the 1931 elections, but Elizabeth received a majority of 2600 votes, electing her the first woman Member of Parliament.

In a 1926 article in Christchurch newspaper The Press, McCombs was described as being "impatient with working people, tending to represent their best interests and not necessarily their opinions. She called a deputation representing the unemployed "an illogical crowd" when they said they wanted work but criticised having to work for charitable aid."

Illness and death

Increasingly poor health made it difficult for McCombs to participate fully in politics. She died in Christchurch on 7 June 1935 aged 61, less than two years after entering parliament. Despite her short career in parliament, she demonstrated that women could successfully seek election, and it was not long before a second woman (Catherine Stewart in 1938, elected for Wellington West) entered parliament. In her Lyttelton electorate, she was succeeded by her son Terry McCombs, who was the Minister of Education in the First Labour Government from 1947 to 1949. Terry McCombs held the Lyttelton seat until 1951, concluding a 38-year family hold on the seat.

References

Bibliography

  • Elizabeth McCombs is the main character in the play Women Like Us (1993), commissioned by the Suffrage Centenary Trust and written by Helen Varley Jamieson.
  • Biography in 1966 Encyclopaedia of New Zealand
  • Obituary in The Press, 8 June 1935 by James Oakley Wilson, Chief Librarian, General Assembly Library, Wellington
  • Women in Parliamentary Life 1970–1990: Hocken Lecture 1993 by Marilyn Waring, pp. 32–33 (Hocken Library, University of Otago, 1994)
  • Christchurch City Library: Elizabeth McCombs
  • Cartoon of Elizabeth McCombs entering Parliament, with male MPs in drag
  • "Elizabeth Reid McCombs: Devoted Champion of Women's Interests" NZ Truth |issue=1156, 26 January 1928 |page=6