Pankhurst emigrated to Australia in 1914 following a falling out with her family, estrangement from them and frequent incarceration. She sailed from
Southampton to
Melbourne aboard the
Geelong. Pankhurst's experience of activism enabled her to be recruited during
World War I as an organiser for the
Women's Peace Army in Melbourne by Goldstein. Pankhurst wrote a
pacifist booklet called
Put Up the Sword (1915), and addressed public meetings, speaking against war and
conscription. On 8 March 1917, her mother Emmeline sent an angry telegram to the
Australian Prime Minister,
Billy Hughes, in which she condemned her daughter for her opposition to conscription and the war effort, saying that: "I am ashamed of Adela and repudiate her." '', 29 August 1917 On 23 August 1917, Pankhurst spearheaded a women's protest in Melbourne against rising food prices. She was arrested for her involvement in the protest but was released on
bail until her trial. Reverend
Fredrick Sinclaire of the Free Religious Fellowship married the couple on 30 September 1917 in Melbourne, Prime Minister Hughes offered to commute her sentence under the condition that she never gave a speech again. Pankhurst refused Hughes' terms and only weeks after being married returned to jail to serve her four-month sentence. A petition was signed by other suffragettes advocating on behalf of her release, but it was ineffective and she served her full sentence. '', 22 April 1922 Upon being released in January 1918, the Walsh family moved from Melbourne to
Sydney. In Sydney, Adela gave birth to their son and four daughters: Richard (born 1918), Sylvia (born 1920), Christian (born 1921), Ursula (born 1923), and Faith (born and died 1926). In 1920, Pankhurst and her husband became founding members of the
Communist Party of Australia, from which she was later expelled. Pankhurst also wrote for the ''Seamen's Journal'' (the publication of the
Seamen's Union of Australia) and organized for the Social Democratic League. In 1941 Pankhurst became one of the founding members of the far-right
nationalistic,
Australia First Movement. She was a paid Japanese agent. At the outbreak of
World War II, Pankhurst publicly spoke out against forming a trade alliance with America, saying that Japan would be a better trading partner. for her advocacy of peace with Japan and support for Nazi Germany. She was released in October. She died on 23 May 1961, aged 75, and was buried according to Catholic rites. She was survived by her three children. ==Posthumous recognition==