Margaret Bertha Dixson (née Shann) (11 July 1877 â 25 June 1940) was an early Australian follower of the Bahá'àFaith in Melbourne, Victoria. She played a significant role in the establishment of the Bahá'àFaith in Australia. Dixson was instrumental in forming and hosting the first Local Spiritual Assembly of the Australian Bahá'àcommunity in Melbourne in 1923 and as the Secretary effectively introduced Bahá'àadministration to Australia. Dixson was also the Secretary of the Sydney Local Assembly from 1925 to 1927.
Dixson grew up in rural Victoria and had a conventional early education. She was originally from an Anglican family, and her father was a devout Christian. Her parents Frank and Frances Shann were pastoralists. They separated and then divorced, causing the family of four siblings to be split between the two parents. Dixson and her sister Elizabeth stayed with her mother, and the brothers Edward and Frank stayed with their father. Dixson worked as a governess on a rural property, and at the age of nineteen married her employerâÂÂs brother Walter Dixson, who was a moderately successful wheat farmer. They had three children: Doris, John and Molly. Although not having the opportunity to pursue higher education or gain qualifications, Dixson had profound intellectual interests, and specifically, she studied numerology, astrology and Esperanto. In 1916, DixsonâÂÂs husband died from a cerebral haemorrhage resulting from a farm accident, and the family left the farm and moved to Melbourne.
Upon moving to Melbourne, as a widow and sole parent, Dixson struggled financially and had periods of ill health. She pursued her intellectual interests, and visited the New Civilisation Centre in Melbourne regularly. The Centre was established by Dr Julia Seton Sears from the United States, founder of the New Thought movement in North America. Dixson taught numerology classes at the New Civilisation Centre in Melbourne, where in November 1923 she was introduced to BaháâÂÂàteachings by John Hyde and Clara Dunn, who had first introduced the BaháâÂÂàFaith to Sydney in April 1922. Dixon was therefore one of AustraliaâÂÂs earliest BaháâÂÂÃÂs.
On 9 December 1923, seventeen Bahá'ÃÂs gathered at the residence of Margaret Dixson in South Yarra, to form the first Local Assembly of the Australian Bahá'àcommunity. Dixson also assisted with the logistics of preparing for the visit of inspiring Bahá'àspeaker and traveller Martha Root from the United States, who visited Melbourne in July 1924. Dixson formed a close friendship with Clara Dunn and Dixson and her children moved to Sydney in November 1925, staying with the Dunns in Randwick, to assist Clara Dunn with her recovery when she became ill.<sup>[5]</sup> Dixson assisted as Secretary of the Sydney Spiritual Assembly which was formed and hosted by the Dunns when she arrived.
Dixson returned to Melbourne in August 1927, at a time that the Bahá'àmembership in Melbourne was declining. The Melbourne Spiritual Assembly was re-formed in 1931, inspired by the visit of Keith Ransom-Kehler, another inspiring Bahá'àspeaker and traveller from the United States. In May 1934 Dixson travelled to Sydney for the formation of the National Spiritual Assembly of the Bahá'ÃÂs of Australia and New Zealand. From 1934 to 1940 Dixson kept notes about the Melbourne Bahá'àcommunity in an acclaimed historical document known as âÂÂThe Diary of a Melbourne Bahá'ÃÂâÂÂ. Dixson suffered a series of debilitating illness during these years; and died on 25 June 1940 at the age of sixty-two. She was buried at the Springvale Botanical Cemetery on 26 June 1940. The service was conducted by Unitarian minister Rev. Bottomly who had attended Martha Root's Melbourne lectures.
Dixson is the grandmother of Miriam Dixson, Australian social historian and the author of '.