Margaret Tucker

Margaret TuckerMargaret Tucker at the Aboriginal Burial Stone in 1985. The stone, which is located in the Kings Domain parkland in Melbourne, marks the burial place of the remains of 38 Aboriginal people returned by the Museum of Victoria.

Margaret Tucker (born March 28, 1904, Darlington Point, New South Wales, Australia—died August 23, 1996, Mooroopna, Victoria) was an Australian activist who fought for the civil rights of Aboriginal people. Tucker was the first Aboriginal woman to be appointed to the Victorian Aborigines Welfare Board and to join Australia’s Ministry of Aboriginal Affairs.

Margaret Elizabeth Clements’s Aboriginal name was Lilardia (“flower”). Her mother was Aboriginal, and her father was part Aboriginal and part white. Clements was the eldest of four siblings and grew up attending mission schools. She and her sisters learned traditional Aboriginal customs and language from her family, but the mission prohibited them from expressing their culture outwardly.

Clements was one of the Stolen Generations—Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children who were forcibly removed from their families by government agencies. She and one of her sisters were taken from their family when Clements was 13 years old and placed at the Cootamundra Domestic Training Home for Aboriginal Girls. There she was taught how to be a domestic servant. After completing her training in 1919, she was assigned as a domestic servant to a white family in Sydney. However, after suffering from abuse at their hands, she was reassigned to a different family. When she attempted to run away, she was sent to a sheep station (sheep farm) near Walgett, New South Wales, where she remained for the next three years.

In 1925 Clements moved to Melbourne, which was experiencing an influx of people. She was among the first Aboriginal people to move to the city and worked with others to establish a centralized Aboriginal community from which more leaders and organizations could emerge. Clements herself worked at a factory. She married Phillip Tucker and had a child, Mollie Tucker, in 1927.

Margaret Tucker began her fight for Aboriginal rights in the early 1930s. She joined William Cooper and Douglas Nicholls, among others, in conceiving the Australian Aborigines’ League. The organization’s main goals were Aboriginal representation in Parliament, land rights, and the right to vote. The activists also took part in the first Day of Mourning, held on Australia Day (January 26) in 1938. The Day of Mourning was established to bring attention to the damaging effects that European settlement had on the continent’s Indigenous peoples.

In the 1950s Tucker served as treasurer of the Australian Aborigines’ League. At the end of the decade, she became involved with Moral Re-Armament, a movement founded in the United States to deepen the spiritual life of individuals. Tucker subsequently spent a few months in the United States before returning to Australia. In the 1960s she helped form what came to be known as the United Council of Aboriginal and Islander Women, the first national organization for Indigenous women. In 1964 the Victoria government appointed Tucker to the Victorian Aborigines Welfare Board, which succeeded the Central Board for the Protection of Aborigines, an organization of white members that had managed the lives of Aboriginal people. The Central Board and similar organizations around the country had been responsible for forcibly taking Tucker and thousands of other Aboriginal children from their families, ostensibly for their own good.

For her work in campaigning for Aboriginal rights, Tucker was made a Member of the Order of the British Empire (MBE) in 1968. That year she also joined Australia’s Ministry of Aboriginal Affairs. Her autobiography, If Everyone Cared, was published in 1977. She was one of the first to detail the difficulties of growing up as a member of the early 20th-century Stolen Generations.

Joan Hibler Tara Ramanathan