The Australian Women's Weekly

A voice, a force, and a friend

In 1947 The Australian Women’s Weekly correspondent Anne Matheson was crossing the grassy plains of South Africa on the King’s train; her tape recorder clutched in her white-gloved hand. Despite the oppressive heat, she and her press corps peers maintained an impeccable standard of dress. Anne’s dispatches included the only press interview the Queen consort ever gave, but Anne had discretly omitted spotting Princess Elizabeth sneaking out each morning to take a secret call from her beau, Philip Mountbatten. “There we were by the Zambezi River, with crocodiles nibbling our toes and the Queen in champagne georgette and frills,” Anne recalled in 1976.

Africa was the first of dozens of royal tours Anne covered after proving her mettle in World War II. Female war correspondents were rare, unless you read The Weekly, who sent Adele Shelton Smith to Malaya in 1941, and Dorothy Drain to cover the war crimes trials in Tokyo in 1946. Dorothy was later deployed to Korea and Vietnam. These journalists blazed a trail for female war correspondents today.

Despite the war office’s orders that female correspondents write from a woman’s perspective, Anne insisted on covering all

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from The Australian Women's Weekly

The Australian Women's Weekly1 min read
Insider
GETTY IMAGES. ■
The Australian Women's Weekly6 min read
The Right Daughter
We push open the stiff front door – unlocked, of course. Mum never locks it, she says if someone’s going to choose a house on Tregunter Road to rob, it won’t be ours. My eyes sweep over the exposed brick of the hallway, half the plaster still lingeri
The Australian Women's Weekly2 min read
Health News
Our nervous system can be altered by making sounds as it quickly activates the vagus nerve, which is like a conductor for our nervous system. Using our vocal cords to create sounds is very effective in relieving stress, anxiety and overwhelm. Stand w

Related