Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

Sonja Davies

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Preceded by
  
Fraser Colman

Parents
  
Gwladys Ilma Vile

Succeeded by
  
Trevor Mallard

Party
  
New Zealand Labour Party


Political party
  
Labour

Movies
  
Bread & Roses

Name
  
Sonja Davies

Children
  
Penny, Mark Davies

Sonja Davies wwwnzedgecomwpcontentthemesboilerplatepost

Full Name
  
Sonja Margaret Loveday Vile

Born
  
11 November 1923 Wallaceville, New Zealand (
1923-11-11
)

Role
  
New Zealand member of Parliament

Died
  
June 12, 2005, New Zealand

Books
  
Bread and Roses: Sonja Davies, Her Story, Bread and Roses: Her Story, Marching on -

Sonja Margaret Loveday Davies (née Vile, 11 November 1923 – 12 June 2005) was a New Zealand trade unionist, peace campaigner, and Member of Parliament. On 6 February 1987 Davies was the third appointee to the Order of New Zealand.

Contents

Early life

Sonja Vile was born in the Upper Hutt suburb of Wallaceville in 1923. Her mother was Gwladys Ilma Vile, a nurse, and a granddaughter of Job Vile. Sonja Vile only learned of her father's identity, the Irish army major Gerald Dempsey, when she was 20, but never made any contact. She had four different foster homes before her grandparents took her in, and they lived in Oamaru and Woodville. Aged seven, she went back to her mother in Wellington to live with her younger sister and her new step-father. The family moved to Dunedin, then Auckland, and in 1939 back to Wellington; by then, she also had a younger brother. The speeches by pacifists Ormond Burton and Arch Barrington appealed to her social conscience but caused tension with her parents, and she consequently left home aged 16 supporting herself by work in bookshops.

Involvement in unions

Davies helped to found the Working Women's Council, and in 1974 she became the first female executive of the Federation of Labour.

Member of Parliament

Davies became the Labour MP for Pencarrow in 1987 and served two terms, retiring in 1993; Trevor Mallard replaced her. Davies died in Wellington in 2005.

Media

Her autobiography, Bread and Roses: Her Story, (ISBN 1-86953-162-0), was turned into a film in 1994. Directed by Gaylene Preston, the film was also called Bread and Roses. A second volume of autobiography, Marching On (ISBN 1-86941-296-6) was published in 1997.

  • Bread and Roses (film, 1994) on IMDb
  • References

    Sonja Davies Wikipedia