104:, a patriotic, paramilitary organisation formed in Britain in 1905 by Roger Pocock, a former constable with the North West Mounted Police and Boer War veteran, to bolster the defensive capacity of the British Empire. A gift of £10,000 helped the establishment of an aged and infirm ministers' fund in the Baptist Church, and much assistance was given to the building of churches in various parts of the state. A sum of £20,000 was used to build a cancer wing at the Ryde home for incurables. Dixson, at various times, served as president of the Baptist Union, of the Baptist Home Mission Society, and of
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to the Royal
Society for the Welfare of Mothers and Babies, to set up a model welfare centre. It was opened in 1922, after Emma Dixson's death, by one of her daughters, and named the Emma Elizabeth Dixson Welfare Centre; the day care centre which was part of it was known in abbreviated form as the
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institutions. An early substantial gift was £5000 as the beginning of a fund to present a battleship to
Britain. This fund was not successful and Dixson's gift was devoted to educating British boys at Australian agricultural colleges. In addition to seeking to fund a battleship for Britain, Dixson
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business founded by his father, and became a partner in it in 1864. In 1866, he married Emma
Elizabeth (1844–1922), daughter of William Edward Shaw. The business grew steadily and, after his father's death in 1880, expanded rapidly under the management of Hugh Dixson and his brother
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Scout Group (known as "Mrs Emma Dixson's Own"), donating the land and paying for the construction of the scout hall. Extensions to the scout hall were built in 1924 by the Dixson children, as a memorial to their mother. In 1919, she gifted six houses in
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In 1900, Emma Dixson founded the Sydney
Medical Mission, a service run by women for women of the poorer areas of the city. She was a vice-president of the League of Boy Scouts, and became the patron of the 1st
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451:. No. 12, 709. New South Wales, Australia. 4 March 1908. p. 9 – via National Library of Australia.
371:. No. 1751. New South Wales, Australia. 10 August 1919. p. 15 – via National Library of Australia.
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287:. No. 1262. New South Wales, Australia. 27 March 1910. p. 19 – via National Library of Australia.
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247:. No. 11175. New South Wales, Australia. 17 March 1915. p. 6 – via National Library of Australia.
391:. No. 1898. New South Wales, Australia. 11 June 1922. p. 11 – via National Library of Australia.
431:. No. 8972. New South Wales, Australia. 3 March 1908. p. 3 – via National Library of Australia.
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70:. At 14 years of age, Dixson went to work at a timber yard for Phillip McMahon. In 1856, he joined the
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Emma Dlxson Day
Nursery. She was a life governor of the Queen Victoria Homes for Consumptives, the
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For his nephew Hugh Robert Dixson (1865–1940), also a businessman and philanthropist, see
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Proprietary
Limited, probably the largest business of its kind in Australia at the time.
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After retirement, Dixson and his wife continued their interest in the
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Craig. He was educated at the Elfred House
Private School kept by
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423:"FOR WOMEN. BRITISH EMPIRE LEAGUE. WELCOME TO MRS. HUGH DIXSON"
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on 11 May 1926, and was survived by two sons, including Sir
206:. Vol. 8. Melbourne University Press. pp. 308–310
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supported other patriotic causes. One such cause was the
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Australasian
Association for the Advancement of Science
363:"MODEL WELFARE CENTRES Mrs. Hugh Dixson's Generosity"
259:"Sydney Medical Mission. Mrs. Hugh Dixson's Gift"
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120:in 1898. He was knighted in the
198:"Dixson, Sir Hugh (1841–1926)"
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443:"WELCOME TO MRS. HUGH DIXSON"
279:"MRS. HUGH DIXSON IN ENGLAND"
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403:"EMMA DIXSON DAY NURSERY"
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428:The Daily Telegraph
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326:1835-0151
50:Biography
464:(1949).
154:and of
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212:2008
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