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In the driver’s seat: how mechanic Alice Anderson drove through gender barriers

20 May 2021

In the driver’s seat: how mechanic Alice Anderson drove through gender barriers

Alice Anderson. Credit: University of Melbourne Archives.

 

In 1919 at the tender age of 22, Kew local Alice Anderson entered the history books by opening Australia’s first all-female car garage.

Alice working at her Lathe in the garage (in the early days of motoring garage mechanics built their own spare parts before car manufacturers supplied them as a matter of course). Alice working at her lathe in the garage. Credit: University of Melbourne Archives.Honouring that achievement, Alice has been recognised by the Victorian Government. She was inducted into the 2020 Victorian Honour Roll of Women and this year LaunchVic opened a $10 million Alice Anderson Sidecar fund, co-investing between $50,000 and $300,000 into women-led start-ups.

It’s a fitting tribute to a woman with a remarkable backstory.

While her name doesn’t ring many bells today, Alice Anderson (1897 to 1926) was quite a celebrity in the Roaring Twenties, renowned for her entrepreneurial smarts.

“Alice was a household name before she died suddenly in 1926 aged just 29,” says historian, Loretta Smith, who has published a biography on Alice, A Spanner in the Works. “Her unexpected death was front page news in every major paper in the country and she was deeply mourned. A few decades later she was barely remembered.”

As with many women throughout history who have achieved remarkable things, they are usually not the ones who write the history, Loretta observes. “Men have often taken the credit for women’s achievements and often written them out of the history books as if their extraordinary lives had never existedThat’s why I chose to write her biography – to put Alice back on the map, to be recognised as the pioneering woman she was.”

portrait image of author wearing white hatBiographer Loretta SmithThat pioneering spirit was clear when Alice was a teenager.

After learning to drive in her teens at her father’s transport service in Healesville and discovering a serious passion for cars, Alice apprenticed with a Melbourne mechanic and became an expert in how to strip and restore engines.

Apprenticeship complete, 22-year-old Alice bought a block of land across the road from where she was boarding and opened her own purpose-built all-female enterprise, The Kew Garage, apprenticing nine staff. The garage not only repaired cars, but also sold petrol, operated a driving school, and offered a 24-hour chauffeur service.

Despite rumblings from other Melbourne garages who didn’t want a woman on their turf stealing work, Alice built many lucrative connections and her business took off.

Chauffeuring proved profitable and before long, Alice was training more than 30 female chauffeurs Black and White photo taken in 1925 of the Kew garageKew Garage circa 1925. Credit: Loretta Smith private collection.to work from her garage. When she wasn’t fixing cars or pumping gas, Alice also took on chauffeur jobs for wealthy households including politicians, newspaper magnates, financiers, stock and station agents, and sheep graziers.

A sense of adventure coloured every aspect of Alice’s short life.

Some driving assignments saw her taking touring parties through remote stretches of South Australia, New South Wales and Tasmania, organising every aspect of each trip including meals and accommodation.

And for fun, she once donned driving goggles and embarked on a 2607-kilometre, three-week journey to Alice Springs through the desert in a 1926 Baby Austin. “After nine years running her garage around the clock, this was her idea of a holiday,” laughs Loretta, who says Alice bought the vehicle with the view of promoting it as the smallest manufactured car at the time to try to reach the heart of inland Australia.

“Forever the entrepreneur, she gained publicity and sponsorship from an Austin car dealer and an oil company in return for sending regular telegrams of their progress. Fortunately, Alice and the Austin came through with flying colours though the arduous trip was too much for Jessie Webb (Alice’s former teacher), who abandoned Alice and the Austin in Oodnadatta for the train home instead.”

That pioneering attitude also saw Alice invent one business product that could have made a lot of money, if only she had patented it globally instead of just patenting it in Australia and allowing the patent to lapse.

“Had Alice taken out an international patent on her ‘Get-Out-and-Get-Under’,” says Loretta, “the under-car trolley she designed and built in 1918, to work on car engines, would not have been stolen by an American businessman, who took the idea back to the States and marketed it as the ‘Creeper’ – used to this day by almost every car mechanic around the world.”

Alice’s life story cries out to be told on the screen. “I’m in negotiations with a major production company for a television series based on my biography about Alice,” divulges Loretta with a smile.

The business of networking

Black and white photo of Alice in pier with 3 stock agents with hatsAlice in Gippsland with stock and station agents. Credit: Loretta Smith private collection.Alice moved in the same circles as quite a few high-profile individuals, many of whom became Kew Garage clients.

Her first encounters with well-known individuals were through her family.

Alice’s civil engineer father – who was in business with World War One Military Commander John Monash – helped architects Walter Burley and Marion Mahony Griffin design Canberra’s Lake Burley Griffin.

Alice’s mother was one of the first women to attend the newly established Burnley Horticultural College and Alice met acclaimed landscape gardener Edna Walling through that connection.

Many of Alice’s clients were women connected with Melbourne University and Melbourne’s Lyceum Club, of which, Alice, sister Frankie and their mother Ellen Mary were members.

On the client list was Edna Walling (who employed Alice’s youngest sister Joan, head gardener to Dame Nellie Melba), Frances Taylor (founding editor and business manager of Woman’s World, one of the most popular magazines in Australia at the time), Georgina Sweet (Australia’s first professor in biology), Janet Grieg (Victoria’s first female anaesthetist) and Jessie Webb (who in 1908 became Melbourne University’s first female lecturer in the history department).

The famous names didn’t end there – Robert and Patty Menzies and the Syme newspaper family were also Kew Garage clients.

Angel Sidecar: The Alice Anderson Fund

In 2019, 104 Victorian startups received Angel or VC investment*. Just 19 had a woman founder.

LaunchVic is helping grow the Victorian startup sector with the Alice Anderson Fund, a $10 million Angel sidecar fund that co-invests in women-led early-stage startups.

Applications are open to local and international investors from July 1 2021. 

Operations

The Alice Anderson Fund will provide between $50,000 - $300,000 to 40-60 women-led startups by 2024.

Private sector investors will match the government’s contribution by a minimum of 3:1 in a ‘Sidecar’ structure designed to increase participation in angel funding rounds. 

This unlocks up to $40 million in early-stage investment over the next three years at a crucial time for the Victorian startup ecosystem, with an estimated $97 million $97 million annual shortfall according to research by Startup Genome. 

85% of the Government’s investment will be taken as equity, while the remaining 15% will be provided as a non-dilutive grant to ensure more of the company stays in the startup’s hands.

Who can apply?

Investors apply on a Founder’s behalf for this opportunity. 

The fund is open to local and international Angel Networks, Early-Stage VCs and individual investors. 

You must meet the criteria of a sophisticated investor or hold a valid AFSL license, and operate independently from the startup.

Investors are being urged to review their portfolios for promising Victorian women-led startups ahead of applications opening on 1 July 2021. 

Discover a full list of women-led businesses and woman founders via LaunchVic’s startup database –  findingstartups.launchvic.org.

The most comprehensive of its kind in Australia, this free, open-source database makes it easy to search startups by stage and sector, and access quick insights on funding, talent and emerging sectors. 

Applications for the Alice Anderson Sidecar fund open on the 1 July 2021. To learn more about the fund and to apply visit the LaunchVic website.

 

 
Article by Georgina Jerums for the Victorian Connection 
Originally published 17 June 2020

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The Victorian Connection are a content and news site, published by the Victorian Government’s Department of Jobs, Precincts and Regions. Stories are for those who want to know more about our state’s people, communities and economy. You can read more articles or stay in touch with us by subscribing to our monthly newsletter or by following us on Twitter or LinkedIn.


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