Florence Matomela was one of the first women to volunteer in the 1952 Defiance Campaign. The more strict influx control measures and pass laws under the Native Laws Amendment Act implemented in 1952 made it an offence for any African to be in an urban area for longer than 72 hours without the necessary documentation. The only women who were permitted to live in
townships were the wives and unmarried daughters of men with permits. For the first time, women were required to carry reference books. The reference book held the holders identity, employment, place of legal residence, tax payments and if applicable permission to be in urban areas. Many women were against this as it would take away their freedom of movement. Protests started when news of the new legislation were leaked to the press. After influx control regulations were implemented in
Port Elizabeth. Florence Matomela spearheaded a demonstration which resulted into the burning of passbooks. Making this one of the first acts of the
Defiance Campaign in the Eastern Cape. Florence Matomela, along with
Frances Baard, Hilda Tshaka, Talita Chaba and
Christina Jasson played a major role in organising the
Defiance Campaign in New Brighton, Port Elizabeth. They held numerous mass meetings. There were police informants who attended these meetings and they reported that Matomela was one of the most effective and militant speakers in
New Brighton. Florence Matomela often appealed to women and other volunteers to join the
African National Congress,
ANC, and drew in many members as the leading figure of the
ANC at the time. On the 26 of June 1952 she and other activists held a mass meeting at the civic center in New Brighton. They left the civic center in the early hours of the morning for a demonstration. They planned to enter the "Europeans only" section of New Brighton Railway Station. Police sergeants were awaiting them by 5 o'clock that morning. Florence Matomela and another 34 activists were arrested in Port Elizabeth due to their participation in the
Defiance Campaign. Due to her involvement in the campaign, she spent six weeks in prison on a charge for civil disobedience. She was later tried again with leaders of the Cape and given a nine-month suspended sentence. Matomela was the provincial organiser of the African National Congress Women's League (ANCWL) and vice-president of the Federation of South African Women (FEDSAW) in the mid 1950s. When Florence Matomela was the president of the Eastern Cape branch of the ANCWL, she met with
Frances Baard, who was a leader in the Food and Canning Workers Union (FCWU), and
Ray Alexander, who was the general secretary of the FCWU in Port Elizabeth. Together they called a meeting to discuss the possibilities of creating a national women's organisation. There is no formal record of the meeting, however Ray Alexander said that about 40 women attended. FEDSAW was launched on the 17 April 1954. She helped organise the 1956 Women's March to the
Union Buildings. She was one of the 156 charged for the Treason trial however, her charges were later dropped. She was prohibited from being in Port Elizabeth in 1962. She was given a five-year sentence for furthering the aims of the banned ANC. Due to poor health provision in prison her health deteriorated, she was sometimes deprived of her
insulin injections as a person suffering from
diabetes. She was released from prison in 1968 to news that her husband had died three years prior without her notification. Matomela was banned yet again and died under the banning orders in 1969 at the age of 59. ==Honours==