Beryl Grant

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Born(1921-09-11)11 September 1921
Died4 November 2017(2017-11-04) (aged 96)
OccupationNurse
RelativesAgnes Robertson (adoptive mother)
Beryl Grant
Born(1921-09-11)11 September 1921
Died4 November 2017(2017-11-04) (aged 96)
OccupationNurse
RelativesAgnes Robertson (adoptive mother)

Beryl Grant AO OBE (11 September 1921 – 4 November 2017) was an Australian nurse, community worker, and public servant.

Grant was the daughter of Norman William Grant (1888–1927) and Annie (née Laurie; 1889–1935), born on 11 September 1921 in Subiaco, Western Australia,[1] one of three siblings. Her father died when she was five and her mother died when she was 14; she was then adopted by Agnes Robertson, her godmother.[2]

Grant attended Thomas Street State School and the Perth Girls' School. She trained as a nurse at the Perth Children's Hospital and King Edward Memorial Hospital, and then in 1957 won a Florence Nightingale Scholarship to study at the Royal Melbourne Hospital.[3]

Career

Grant returned to Western Australia in 1959 and was appointed matron of the Ngala Mothercraft and Training Centre, a nursing training facility in South Perth which also served as a residential home for unwed mothers and wards of the state. She held that position until 1980.[4]

Grant reportedly played "an instrumental role in forcibly separating mothers and their young children" as part of forced adoption practices employed during her tenure at Ngala. In 2024, following the Inquiry into Past Forced Adoption in Western Australia, the chief executive of Ngala publicly apologised for the organisation's role in past forced adoptions. Grant had earlier denied in oral history interviews that any unwed mothers had been pressured into giving up their children.[5]

In 1979, Grant was appointed as a special magistrate of the Perth Children's Court. In 1989 she also became chair of the Child Care Services Board, serving until 1996. She was a member of several state government task forces, and chaired an inquiry into prostitution in 1990.[6]

In 1968, Grant was awarded a Winston Churchill Fellowship to study adoption and foster care overseas.[7] She served for periods as state president of the Royal Australian Nursing Federation and president of the Australian College of Nursing, and was also on the board of the Australian Inland Mission.[3] Grant was also prominent in the Uniting Church. In 1985, she became Moderator of the Synod of Western Australia, the first woman to hold that position.[8] She served on the board of Uniting Care Homes (later Juniper Aged Care) from 1989 to 2003.[5]

Honours and legacy

References

Further reading

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