Thistle Yolette Harris, also known as Thistle Stead, was an Australian botanist, educator, author and conservationist.
Biography
She was one of three daughters born to Charles Thomas Harris and Illma Richardson Harris. She was educated at Redlands School SCECGS Redlands, Cremorne, where she was taught by the English teacher, Constance Le Plastrier, who was a member of the Naturalists Society of New South Wales and co-author of Botany for Australian Students, and helped foster Harris' interest in native plants. Harris died in 1990 at a nursing home in Summer Hill, New South Wales.
In 1951 she married pioneer conservationist and marine biologistDavid Stead, to whom she had been introduced by Le Plastrier in 1918, when she was sixteen. By marrying Stead she became the second stepmother to the Australian novelist and short-story writer, Christina Stead. Stead was twenty-five years older than Harris and died six years after their marriage.
Work
Harris was a member of the Australian Institute of Landscape Architects and she served as President and Honorary Secretary of the Wildlife Preservation Society of Australia. She was instrumental in facilitating the publication of the Society's journal Australian Wild Life, which was issued intermittently from 1934. She authored twelve books on Australian flora and their cultivation in suburban gardens. Harris's first book, Wildflowers of Australia, provided a popular flora of Australia and included studies of approximately 250 plants. Her book, Gardening with Australian Plants, Shrubs, describes over 100 genera covering 600 species. In 1963 Harris established the 50 haWirrimbirra Sanctuary at Bargo, New South Wales, in memory of her late husband, who had died in 1957. She also established the David G. Stead Memorial Wildlife Research Foundation of Australia to undertake its management. In 1965 she donated the property to the National Trust of Australia and it is managed by the Foundation. With financial assistance from the Gould League of New South Wales, a building was erected on the property in 1971 to act as a Field Studies Centre and in 1973, a teacher from the Education Department was appointed to be a full-time education officer. Harris devoted herself to many causes, especially focused in conservation. In 1963 she was awarded the Field Naturalists Club of Victoria's Australian Natural History Medallion. In 1985 she was awarded an Honorary Doctorate of Science by the University of Wollongong.
Publications
Books authored by Harris include:
1939 – Wildflowers of Australia, illustrated by Adam Forster. Angus & Robertson: Sydney..
1945 – Nature Problems. A book of nature study for young Australians. Brooks & Co: Sydney.
1953 – Australian Plants for the Garden. A handbook on the cultivation of Australian trees, shrubs, other flowering plants, and ferns. Angus & Robertson: Sydney.
1956 – Naturecraft in Australia; a guide for the nature-lover, the bushwalker, the student, and the teacher. Angus & Robertson: Sydney.