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Zelda D'Aprano is an Australian feminist and activist who was born on 24 January, 1928 in Melbourne, Australia. She is best known for her involvement in the Women's Liberation Movement in Australia in the 1970s. D'Aprano was born to Italian immigrants and grew up in a working-class family. She left school at the age of 14 and worked in a variety of jobs, including as a factory worker, a cleaner, and a waitress. In the late 1960s, D'Aprano became involved in the women's liberation movement in Australia. She was a founding member of the Women's Liberation Movement in Melbourne and was a key figure in the campaign for equal pay for women. D'Aprano was also involved in the campaign for abortion law reform in Australia and was a founding member of the Abortion Law Reform Association of Victoria. She was also a founding member of the Women's Electoral Lobby and the National Women's Advisory Council. D'Aprano has been awarded numerous awards for her activism, including the Order of Australia in 1989 and the Centenary Medal in 2003. At the age of 90, Zelda D'Aprano's net worth is estimated to be around $1 million. She has earned her wealth through her activism and her involvement in the Women's Liberation Movement.

Popular As N/A
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Age 90 years old
Zodiac Sign Aquarius
Born 24 January 1928
Birthday 24 January
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Date of death 21 February 2018
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Nationality

We recommend you to check the complete list of Famous People born on 24 January. She is a member of famous feminist with the age 90 years old group.

Zelda D'Aprano Height, Weight & Measurements

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She is currently single. She is not dating anyone. We don't have much information about She's past relationship and any previous engaged. According to our Database, She has no children.

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Zelda D'Aprano Net Worth

Her net worth has been growing significantly in 2022-2023. So, how much is Zelda D'Aprano worth at the age of 90 years old? Zelda D'Aprano’s income source is mostly from being a successful feminist. She is from . We have estimated Zelda D'Aprano's net worth , money, salary, income, and assets.

Net Worth in 2023 $1 Million - $5 Million
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Net Worth in 2022 Pending
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Source of Income feminist

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Timeline

2000

D'Aprano was awarded a degree in Law honoris causa by Macquarie University in 2000, and was inducted into the Victorian Honour Roll of Women in 2001. She was awarded the Order of Australia in 2004

1995

The next year, these three women founded the Women's Action Committee to jump start the Women's Liberation Movement in Melbourne. This organisation tried to get women more involved in activism as "we had passed the stage of caring about a "lady-like" image because women had for too long been polite and ladylike and were still being ignored" (D'Aprano 1995). This led the women to take more militant action on their path to equal pay. These same women founded the Women's Liberation Centre on Little Latrobe Street in 1972.

1975

The Women's Action Committee kept going, and grew as it went. They travelled around Melbourne paying only 75% of the fares, because women were only given 75% of the wage of men at the time. Because women weren't allowed to drink in bars, only in lounges, they did pub crawls across Melbourne. The Committee helped arrange the first pro-choice rally in around 1975. Even though it was an incredibly secret subject at the time, 500 women attended the march, though with very little media coverage.

1971

She kept her left-wing values, though she left the Communist Party in 1971, and recognised that the socialist movement was often just as unaccepting of women as everyone else.

1969

After various jobs, including at a shortbread factory and a grocer's, D'Aprano went to work at Larundel Psychiatric Hospital as a dental nurse. She joined the Hospital Employees' Federation No.2 Branch, in which there was little support for her, especially as she was a woman. She was made shop steward while there, putting her in charge of all the women who worked as dental nurses. She also worked two days a week at a disabled children's hospital, the other three days spent at the psychiatric hospital. In 1969, she joined the Australasian Meat Industry Employees' Union (AMIEU), working as a clerk there. She was appalled by the conditions in the office, and even more so when she discovered that there was no one to talk to about them. She attempted to be active in both the AMIEU and at work in trying to correct the work situations that women faced, but was constantly rebuffed and her efforts overlooked. After being fired from the AMIEU for criticising her boss, she joined the Mail Exchange as a mail sorter.

It was in 1969, when D'Aprano was working in the AMIEU, that the union was being used as a test case for the Equal Pay Case. D'Aprano and several other women waited as the case was being decided in the Arbitration Court. On 21 October 1969, after the case failed, she chained herself to the doors of the Commonwealth Building during her lunch break, with women who worked in the building supporting her. She was eventually cut free by police. Ten days later, on 31 October, she was joined by Alva Geikie and Thelma Solomon, and they chained themselves to the doors of the Arbitration Court, the one which had dismissed the Equal Pay Case. There was media coverage for both, although little footage. For this activism she was dismissed from the AMIEU.

1961

D'Aprano left school before her fourteenth birthday to support her family. She later fully qualified as a dental nurse in 1961. She completed her Leaving Certificate in 1965, at the same time as her daughter. She attended night school for two years graduating in 1967 as a qualified chiropodist, though she never practised.

1950

D'Aprano (born Zelda Fay Orloff) grew up in a two-bedroom house in Carlton with her brother Maurice, her sister Clara and her parents Shimshon and Rachel Leah Orloff. She grew up in an Orthodox Jewish household, but her mother became a communist when D'Aprano was still a child, prompting D'Aprano to become one herself in later years. She left school before she was 14 to work in various factories, despite being placed in a gifted class at school. She was married at 16 to Charlie D'Aprano, who left her 21 years later, and she had a child when she was 17, a daughter named Leonie. It was at these factory jobs when she first started to notice the inequalities that female workers faced, especially related to the pay gap. She was fired from several jobs for trying to better the conditions in which women worked. She joined the Communist Party in 1950 and was a member until 1971.

1928

Zelda Fay D'Aprano AO (24 January 1928 – 21 February 2018) was a feminist activist living in Melbourne, Victoria.