Swindon's first Lady Mayor, May George.
Described as the
most active and progressive member to occupy a seat on the Town Council, May
George was the first woman to hold the office of Mayor of Swindon. And apparently no one knew quite how to
address her with speakers at public meetings unsure whether to call her Mr or
Mrs Mayor.
Sarah May Williams
was born in 1883 in Craven Arms, Shropshire on the Welsh Borders, the daughter
of George Williams, a railway guard and his wife Eliza. May grew up at 2, Tabernacle Terrace, Carmarthen,
one of six daughters and two sons. No
surprise that she championed the well being of mothers and children during her
political career.
She served a pupil
teacher apprenticeship in Carmarthen before marrying Charles Ferdinando George,
a fellow teacher at Pentrepoeth Council School, in 1903. By 1911 May, Charles
and their young son had moved to Swindon and were living at 85 Avenue Road.
Although not a
native Swindonian, May’s connections with the town went back to her earliest
childhood. Her mother’s sister had moved
to Swindon with her husband Joseph Crockett, a foreman shunter. The couple never had any children but raised
May’s elder sister Bertha as their own.
May’s political
career began in 1921 when she was elected councillor for the South Ward. She became an Alderman in 1931 and Swindon’s
first woman Mayor in 1935.
May worked
tirelessly to improving the lives of women and children, and served on the
Maternity and Child Welfare Committee. She
was a tenacious and persistent campaigner and, unafraid of becoming unpopular
with her fellow councillors, was famed for her fierce debating.
She was
instrumental in establishing a standard of care at Swindon’s Kingshill
Maternity Home that made it an example for the whole country. May also served on the Guardians’ Committee,
the local Employment Committee and the Pensions Committee and raised funds for
the Royal National Lifeboat Institution.
May collapsed at
her home at ‘Lynwood,’ Croft Road after attending a Council Committee
meeting. She died the following day,
April 21, 1943 aged 60 years old. Speaking
at a later Council Meeting the Mayor, Alderman A.J.B. Selwood paid tribute to
Mrs May George and said he was afraid her premature death was due to overwork.
A large
congregation, including representatives from all the civic and social
organisations with which May had been associated, attended a memorial service
at Christ Church. Her funeral took place
at the English Congregational Church, Lammas Street in her home town of Carmarthen,
where she was buried.
“Mrs George died
as she would have wished, working,” her obituary in the Advertiser read. “No woman – or man – put so much into public
work as she did. Her whole life was
bound up in it.”
Civic Offices pictured today

Comments
Post a Comment