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George Pearce

Sir George Foster Pearce KCVO (14 January 1870 – 24 June 1952) was an Australian politician who served as a Senator for Western Australia from 1901 to 1938. He began his career in the Labor Party but later joined the National Labor Party, the Nationalist Party, and the United Australia Party; he served as a cabinet minister under prime ministers from all four parties.

Sir George Pearce
Pearce, c. 1915
Minister for External Affairs
In office
12 October 1934 – 29 November 1937
Prime MinisterJoseph Lyons
Preceded byJohn Latham
Succeeded byBilly Hughes
Minister for Defence
In office
6 January 1932 – 12 October 1934
Prime MinisterJoseph Lyons
Preceded byBen Chifley
Succeeded byArchdale Parkhill
In office
17 September 1914 – 21 December 1921
Prime MinisterAndrew Fisher
Billy Hughes
Preceded byEdward Millen
Succeeded byWalter Massy-Greene
In office
29 April 1910 – 24 June 1913
Prime MinisterAndrew Fisher
Preceded byJoseph Cook
Succeeded byEdward Millen
In office
13 November 1908 – 2 June 1909
Prime MinisterAndrew Fisher
Preceded byThomas Ewing
Succeeded byJoseph Cook
Leader of the Government in the Senate
In office
6 January 1932 – 29 November 1937
Preceded byJohn Barnes
Succeeded byAlexander McLachlan
In office
9 February 1923 – 19 October 1929
Preceded byEdward Millen
Succeeded byJohn Daly
In office
17 September 1914 – 17 February 1917
Preceded byEdward Millen
Succeeded byEdward Millen
Leader of the Opposition in the Senate
In office
22 October 1929 – 6 January 1932
Preceded byJohn Daly
Succeeded byJohn Barnes
Minister for Home and Territories
In office
21 December 1921 – 18 June 1926
Prime MinisterBilly Hughes
Stanley Bruce
Preceded byAlexander Poynton
Succeeded byWilliam Glasgow
Deputy Leader of the Labor Party
In office
27 October 1915 – 14 November 1916
LeaderBilly Hughes
Preceded byBilly Hughes
Succeeded byAlbert Gardiner
Senator for Western Australia
In office
29 March 1901 – 30 June 1938
Preceded byPosition established
Succeeded byRobert Clothier
Personal details
Born
George Foster Pearce

(1870-01-14)14 January 1870
Mount Barker, Province of South Australia, British Empire
Died24 June 1952(1952-06-24) (aged 82)
Elwood, Victoria, Australia
Political party
Spouse
Eliza Barrett
(m. 1897; died 1947)
OccupationCarpenter
Signature

Pearce was born in Mount Barker, South Australia. He left school at the age of 11 and trained as a carpenter, later moving to Western Australia and becoming involved in the union movement. He helped establish the Labor Party there, and in 1901 – aged 31 – was elected to the new federal parliament. Pearce was elevated to cabinet in 1908, under Andrew Fisher, and served in each of Fisher's three governments. He continued on in cabinet when Billy Hughes became prime minister in 1915, and after the Labor Party split of 1916 followed Hughes to the National Labor Party and then to the Nationalists. Pearce also served in cabinet under Stanley Bruce and, after joining the UAP in 1931, Joseph Lyons. He was Minister for Defence from 1908 to 1909, 1910 to 1913, 1914 to 1921, and 1932 to 1934. His 24 years in cabinet and 37 years as a senator are both records.

Early life edit

Pearce was born on 14 January 1870 in Mount Barker, South Australia. He was the fifth of eleven children born to Jane (née Foster) and James Pearce.[1] His father was a blacksmith of Cornish descent, born in the village of Altarnun, while his mother was born in London.[2] An uncle, George Pearce, briefly served in the South Australian House of Assembly.[3]

During Pearce's childhood his family lived in various locations in rural South Australia. His mother died when he was ten years old, and he left school the following year by which time the family was living in Redhill. His father briefly tried wheat farming on the Eyre Peninsula, then moved the family to Kilkerran on the Yorke Peninsula where he returned to blacksmithing. Pearce began working as a farm labourer at the age of twelve in nearby Maitland. He took up a carpentry apprenticeship in Maitland in 1885, where he also received free evening lessons from the local school headmaster. He moved to Adelaide after completing his apprenticeship, but lost his job in the early 1890s depression.[2]

In 1892, Pearce moved to Western Australia where he found work as a carpenter in Perth. Following the discovery of gold at Coolgardie, he left Perth in March 1894 and went to the Eastern Goldfields where he joined thousands of others in prospecting for alluvial gold.[2] While camped at Kurnalpi, Pearce and two others were attacked by Wangkatha men armed with spears, to which he responded by firing his revolver three times. He had little success in prospecting and returned to Perth in 1895.[4]

After returning to Perth, Pearce resumed his work as a carpenter and his involvement in the labour movement, where he was a member of the Amalgamated Society of Carpenters and Joiners.[4] In the late 1890s he "became one of Perth’s most prominent trade unionists".[3] The local labour movement at the time largely consisted of small craft unions of skilled tradesmen, with an atmosphere less militant than in the other Australian colonies.[4] In 1897 Pearce nonethless led a strike on building sites that led to him being blacklisted for several weeks.[3][5] In the same year he purchased a home in the working-class suburb of Subiaco, working at the local Whittaker Bros. timber mill.[4]

Early political career edit

 
Pearce in 1901

In 1893, Pearce helped found the Progressive Political League, a precursor to the Western Australian branch of the ALP.[1] He was elected to the Subiaco Municipal Council in 1898.[4]

In the lead-up to Federation in 1901, Pearce joined the executive of the Western Australian Federal League and campaigned for the "Yes" vote at the referendum in July 1900 which approved Western Australia as an original state. A Trades and Labour Conference held in Perth in August 1900 agreed that labour candidates for the inaugural federal election would be subject to a preselection process for the House of Representatives and that the conference would endorse two candidates for the Senate – one from Perth and one from the Eastern Goldfields.[6] Pearce was selected as the labour candidate from Perth and was elected to a six-year Senate term at the March 1901 federal election. He joined the parliamentary Australian Labor Party (ALP) on its formation in May 1901.[7]

In Pearce's maiden speech to parliament, he outlined his views as a moderate socialist and looked forward to a time where "the representatives of labour and capital could join hands to the advantage of both".[8] He also called for the nationalisation of natural monopolies, and in 1906 introduced an unsuccessful private member's bill to amend the constitution to that effect. Pearce was one of the few free traders in the Labor Party in his first years in parliament, believing high tariff policies made imports more expensive for Western Australia and had few benefits given the state's limited secondary industries.[9] He narrowly missed out on being a member of the first Labor Party cabinet when Chris Watson became Prime Minister in 1904. He was later Chairman of Committees in the Senate from 1907 to 1908.[10]

Fisher governments edit

In 1908, Pearce was elected to cabinet by the ALP caucus as a member of the first Fisher Ministry. He had long shown an interest in defence matters in the Senate and was chosen by Prime Minister Andrew Fisher to become Minister for Defence.[11] He believed it was his duty as minister to accept "any reasonable expenditure on armament, ammunition, and accoutrements" recommended by his advisers and to resolve disagreements between sections of the military.[12] During his first term as minister, Pearce ordered three River-class torpedo-boat destroyers for the what would become the Royal Australian Navy.[3]

Pearce regained the defence portfolio in the second Fisher Ministry (1910–1913). During his second term as minister, he was responsible for the Naval Defence Act 1910, which created the Australian Commonwealth Naval Board and the Royal Australian Naval College.[1] In 1911 he announced that orders had been placed for Australia's first two submarines, AE1 and AE2.[13] Pearce attended the 1911 Imperial Conference in London where the relationship between the Royal Navy and Royal Australian Navy was determined. He oversaw the implementation of the Universal Service Scheme of compulsory military training scheme, and in 1912 approved the creation of the Central Flying School at Point Cook, Victoria, which became the "birthplace of Australian military aviation".[3]

Defence minister, 1914–1921 edit

World War I edit

 
Pearce photographed by Alice Mills in the 1910s

In 1914, Australia entered World War I. Upon Billy Hughes' ascension as Prime Minister, Pearce was named Deputy Leader of the party.[1]

Pearce served as acting prime minister from January to August 1916, while Hughes was in England and France.[14] He was the first senator to hold the position, and the only senator to do so until Bill Spooner in 1962.[15] Outside of the defence portfolio, Pearce oversaw the creation of Advisory Council of Science and Industry, the predecessor of the CSIRO, which Hughes had approved before his departure. In March 1916, he used the War Precautions Act 1914 to set price controls on bread and flour in metropolitan areas. On 6 July he extended this to all other foods, and on 20 July he created the Necessary Commodities Commission with the power to set prices on any item.[16]

By the time of Hughes' return, Australia's prosecution of the war made the introduction of conscription an intensely divisive issue for the ALP. Pearce was convinced of the necessity of introducing conscription, but the majority of his party did not agree. Pearce, along with many other of the party's founding members, subsequently followed Hughes out of the party and into the new "National Labor Party." A few months later, the National Labor Party merged with the Commonwealth Liberal Party to form the Nationalist Party, with Hughes as its leader.[1]

Aftermath edit

 
Caricature of Pearce by John Henry Chinner, c. 1920

In December 1918, following the signing of the Armistice of 11 November 1918 which ended World War I, it was announced that Pearce would be sent to London to oversee the demobilisation and repatriation of Australian troops, although a separation Repatriation Department had been established in 1917 headed by Edward Millen.[17] The announcement received public criticism from those dissatisfied with his performance as defence minister, and a crowd gathered to boo and cat-call Pearce as his ship left Melbourne in January 1919.[18] In London, Pearce faced a number of challenges, including conflict with British authorities over the availability of troop transport ships.[19] In September 1919, he signed the Treaty of Saint-Germain-en-Laye with Austria on behalf of Australia. He returned to Australia the following month in time to campaign at the 1919 federal election.[20]

In January 1920, Pearce and navy minister Joseph Cook approved the proposal of the Air Service Committee to establish the Australian Air Force as a standalone service arm, successfully lobbying cabinet for its independence from the army and navy.[20] In the same month he convened the Senior Officers Conference to report on the size and structure of Australia's post-war military.[21] He approved the report's recommendations around the reorganisation of the Citizen Military Force and retention of compulsory military training, but rejected a proposal to amend the Defence Act to allow Australian soldiers to serve overseas as part of British expeditionary forces.[22] Pearce was the Australian representative at the Washington Naval Conference of 1921.[23]

Post-war politics edit

Bruce–Page government edit

Most of the defectors to the Nationalists subsequently faded into obscurity, but Pearce went on to have a successful career in the party of his erstwhile opponents. After Hughes was deposed as Nationalist leader, Pearce accepted a position in the ministry of Hughes' successor and rival, Stanley Bruce. As Minister for Home and Territories he showed a particular interest in the Northern Territory and was "the driving force" behind its division in 1927 into separate territories of Central Australia and North Australia. It was reversed by the Scullin government in 1931.[1] He became the first Father of the Senate in 1923. He was appointed a Knight Commander of the Royal Victorian Order (KCVO) in 1927.[24]

Lyons government edit

 
Pearce in 1927

In January 1932, following the UAP's victory at the 1931 election, Pearce was appointed defence minister for a fourth time.[25] He articulated the defence policies that he had supported throughout his career in a September 1933 speech to the Millions Club in Sydney: "an efficient Australian navy capable of operating with the Royal Navy; a well-equipped army based on a militia; a modern air force; armaments and munitions factories; and a closer defence relationship with New Zealand".[26] Pearce's speech attracted international attraction for its commitment to rearmament, a policy subsequently adopted by the United Kingdom and other dominions later in the 1930s. He announced announced that the Lyons government would allocate an additional £1.5 million in defence expenditure,[27] effectively doubling the previous year's defence budget and reversing cuts made during the Great Depression.[28]

Following the 1934 federal election, Pearce requested to be removed from the defence portfolio, which had begun to exhaust him. He was instead appointed Minister for External Affairs in October 1934, although he continued to maintain an interest in defence policy.[29] He played no significant role in formulating policy, but helped establish his department as an institution in its own right, expanding the diplomatic corps and supporting the establishment of one of Australia's first foreign affairs journals, Current Notes on International Affairs.[30] The external affairs department had previously been run as a branch of the Prime Minister's Department and did not receive its own separate head until 1935.[31]

As external affairs minister, Pearce supported the Lyons government's diplomatic policy of appeasement of Imperial Japan while Australia continued to rearm. In October 1935, he told U.S. consul-general Jay Pierrepont Moffat that "the government remained suspicious of [Japan]'s ultimate intentions, but with British naval strength reduced below the safety point, and with American aid discounted, there was no policy open to her other than trying to be friendly with Japan and to give her no excuse to adopt an aggressive policy vis-à-vis the Commonwealth".[32] He later echoed Lyons' calls for a Pacific non-aggression treaty between the United States and Japan.[33]

Pearce campaigned for the "No" vote in the 1933 Western Australian secession referendum, touring the state with Lyons and Tom Brennan for two weeks. The "Yes" vote won almost a two-thirds majority, but ultimately secession did not occur.[34] Pearce's opposition to secession played a key role in his defeat at the 1937 federal election, along with claims he had failed to defend Western Australia's interests and had not visited the state often enough. The pro-secession Sunday Times ran an anti-Pearce editorial line, while the Dominion League of Western Australia and the Wheatgrowers' Union ran a "Put Pearce Last" campaign.[35] He resigned as a minister after the election and spent the remainder of his term as a backbencher, concluding his service on 30 June 1938.[36] He was a senator for 37 years and three months, a record term. His total service as a minister was 24 years and seven months, also a record in the Australian Parliament.[1]

Later life edit

Pearce made no attempts to re-enter parliament after his defeat. He served on the Commonwealth Grants Commission from 1939 to 1944, and as chairman of the Defence Board of Business Administration from 1940 until it was abolished in 1947.[3] Prime Minister John Curtin retained him in the latter position despite the opposition of some within the Labor Party, including Arthur Calwell and Eddie Ward.[37] The board supervised all defence expenditure of over £10,000.[1]

Pearce had lived mainly in Melbourne since entering the Senate, but co-owned a farm in Tenterden, Western Australia, with his son and visited regularly.[3] He published an autobiography, Carpenter to Cabinet, in 1951, which had been written over a decade earlier.[1] Pearce died at his home in Elwood on 24 June 1952, aged 82.[3] At the time of his death, he was the last surviving member of the first Australian Senate elected at Federation in 1901; MHRs Billy Hughes and King O'Malley from the First Parliament would outlive him.[1]

Personal life edit

In 1897, Pearce married Eliza Maud Barrett, a domestic servant, at Trinity Church, Perth.[4] They had two sons and two daughters together.[1] He was widowed in 1947.[38] His great-granddaughter Jane Prentice was elected to federal parliament in 2010.[39]

Legacy edit

Places named in Pearce's honour include RAAF Base Pearce and the electoral Division of Pearce in Western Australia, Pearce Peak in Antarctica, and the Canberra suburb of Pearce.

Australia's longest-serving prime minister Robert Menzies wrote the introduction to Peter Heydon's 1965 biography of Pearce, Quiet Decision, and recalled that he had "never sat with an abler man than George Pearce" in cabinet. Menzies praised Pearce's "profound and reflective mind", analytical way of thinking, and ability to express ideas and policy recommendations.[3]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Beddie, B. (1988). "Pearce, Sir George Foster (1870–1952)". Australian Dictionary of Biography. National Centre of Biography, Australian National University. ISSN 1833-7538. Retrieved 20 October 2007.
  2. ^ a b c Connor 2011, p. 6.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i "Pearce, Sir George Foster (1870–1952)]". The Biographical Dictionary of the Australian Senate. Retrieved 30 November 2022.
  4. ^ a b c d e f Connor 2011, p. 7.
  5. ^ Merritt, John (1962). "George Foster Pearce and the Perth Building Trades Strike of 1897". Bulletin of the Australian Society for the Study of Labour History (3): 5–22.
  6. ^ Connor 2011, p. 8.
  7. ^ Connor 2011, p. 9.
  8. ^ Connor 2011, p. 10.
  9. ^ Connor 2011, p. 11.
  10. ^ "Appendix 3―Deputy Presidents and Chairmen of Committees (1901–2009)". Parliament of Australia. from the original on 18 May 2019. Retrieved 10 September 2017.
  11. ^ Connor 2011, p. 16.
  12. ^ Connor 2011, p. 17.
  13. ^ "Australian Navy: Submarines Ordered". The Sydney Morning Herald. 8 February 1911.
  14. ^ Connor 2011, p. 77.
  15. ^ "Spooner Acting Prime Minister". The Canberra Times. 1 September 1962. from the original on 15 April 2019. Retrieved 2 November 2019.
  16. ^ Connor 2011, p. 78.
  17. ^ Connor 2011, pp. 129–131.
  18. ^ Connor 2011, p. 131.
  19. ^ Connor 2011, pp. 132–133.
  20. ^ a b Connor 2011, p. 136.
  21. ^ Connor 2011, p. 137.
  22. ^ Connor 2011, p. 138.
  23. ^ Connor 2011, pp. 139–141.
  24. ^ "It's an Honour: KCVO". from the original on 26 May 2011. Retrieved 20 January 2009.
  25. ^ Connor 2011, p. 146.
  26. ^ Connor 2011, pp. 145–146.
  27. ^ Connor 2011, p. 145.
  28. ^ Connor 2011, p. 151.
  29. ^ Connor 2011, pp. 161–163.
  30. ^ Connor 2011, p. 165.
  31. ^ Connor 2011, p. 163.
  32. ^ Connor 2011, pp. 163–164.
  33. ^ Connor 2011, p. 164.
  34. ^ Henderson, Anne (2011). Joseph Lyons: The People's Prime Minister. UNSW Press. pp. 343–344. ISBN 978-1742240992.
  35. ^ Connor 2011, pp. 165–166.
  36. ^ Connor 2011, p. 166.
  37. ^ McMullin 1991, p. 215.
  38. ^ Connor 2011, p. 167.
  39. ^ Prentice, Jane (29 September 2010). "Maiden speech". Parliament of Australia. from the original on 31 May 2019. Retrieved 2 November 2019.

Further reading edit

  • Connor, John (2011). Anzac and Empire: George Foster Pearce and the Foundations of Australian Defence. Cambridge University Press.
  • Ling, Ted (2011). "George Pearce and Development of the North, 1921–37". Commonwealth Government Records about the Northern Territory (PDF). National Archives of Australia. pp. 39–56. ISBN 9781920807863.
  • Heydon, Peter (1965). Quiet Decision: A Study of George Foster Pearce. Melbourne University Press.
  • McMullin, Ross (1991). The Light on the Hill: The Australian Labor Party 1891–1991. South Melbourne: Oxford University Press Australia. ISBN 0-19-553451-4.
  • Pearce, George (1951). Carpenter to Cabinet: Thirty-Seven Years of Parliament. Hutchinson.

External links edit

 

Parliament of Australia
New title Senator for Western Australia
1901–1938
Succeeded by
Political offices
Preceded by Minister for Defence
1908–1909
Succeeded by
Preceded by Minister for Defence
1910–1913
Succeeded by
Preceded by Minister for Defence
1914–1921
Succeeded by
Preceded by Minister for Home and Territories
1921–1926
Succeeded by
Preceded by Vice-President of the Executive Council
1926–1929
Succeeded by
Preceded by Minister for Defence
1932–1934
Succeeded by
Preceded by Minister for External Affairs
1934–1937
Succeeded by
Preceded by Minister in charge of Territories
1934–1937
Party political offices
Preceded by Deputy Leader of the Australian Labor Party
1915–1916
Succeeded by
Preceded by Leader of the Australian Labor Party in the Senate
1914–1916
New political party Leader of the National Labor Party in the Senate
1916–1917
Defunct political party
Preceded by Leader of the Nationalist Party in the Senate
1923–1931
Defunct political party
New political party Leader of the United Australia Party in the Senate
1931–1937
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Honorary titles
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first
Earliest serving living Senator
1951–1952
Succeeded by

george, pearce, other, people, named, disambiguation, george, foster, pearce, kcvo, january, 1870, june, 1952, australian, politician, served, senator, western, australia, from, 1901, 1938, began, career, labor, party, later, joined, national, labor, party, na. For other people named George Pearce see George Pearce disambiguation Sir George Foster Pearce KCVO 14 January 1870 24 June 1952 was an Australian politician who served as a Senator for Western Australia from 1901 to 1938 He began his career in the Labor Party but later joined the National Labor Party the Nationalist Party and the United Australia Party he served as a cabinet minister under prime ministers from all four parties The Right HonourableSir George PearceKCVOPearce c 1915Minister for External AffairsIn office 12 October 1934 29 November 1937Prime MinisterJoseph LyonsPreceded byJohn LathamSucceeded byBilly HughesMinister for DefenceIn office 6 January 1932 12 October 1934Prime MinisterJoseph LyonsPreceded byBen ChifleySucceeded byArchdale ParkhillIn office 17 September 1914 21 December 1921Prime MinisterAndrew FisherBilly HughesPreceded byEdward MillenSucceeded byWalter Massy GreeneIn office 29 April 1910 24 June 1913Prime MinisterAndrew FisherPreceded byJoseph CookSucceeded byEdward MillenIn office 13 November 1908 2 June 1909Prime MinisterAndrew FisherPreceded byThomas EwingSucceeded byJoseph CookLeader of the Government in the SenateIn office 6 January 1932 29 November 1937Preceded byJohn BarnesSucceeded byAlexander McLachlanIn office 9 February 1923 19 October 1929Preceded byEdward MillenSucceeded byJohn DalyIn office 17 September 1914 17 February 1917Preceded byEdward MillenSucceeded byEdward MillenLeader of the Opposition in the SenateIn office 22 October 1929 6 January 1932Preceded byJohn DalySucceeded byJohn BarnesMinister for Home and TerritoriesIn office 21 December 1921 18 June 1926Prime MinisterBilly HughesStanley BrucePreceded byAlexander PoyntonSucceeded byWilliam GlasgowDeputy Leader of the Labor PartyIn office 27 October 1915 14 November 1916LeaderBilly HughesPreceded byBilly HughesSucceeded byAlbert GardinerSenator for Western AustraliaIn office 29 March 1901 30 June 1938Preceded byPosition establishedSucceeded byRobert ClothierPersonal detailsBornGeorge Foster Pearce 1870 01 14 14 January 1870Mount Barker Province of South Australia British EmpireDied24 June 1952 1952 06 24 aged 82 Elwood Victoria AustraliaPolitical partyLabor until 1916 National Labor 1916 1917 Nationalist 1917 1931 United Australia Party from 1931 SpouseEliza Barrett m 1897 died 1947 wbr OccupationCarpenterSignature Pearce was born in Mount Barker South Australia He left school at the age of 11 and trained as a carpenter later moving to Western Australia and becoming involved in the union movement He helped establish the Labor Party there and in 1901 aged 31 was elected to the new federal parliament Pearce was elevated to cabinet in 1908 under Andrew Fisher and served in each of Fisher s three governments He continued on in cabinet when Billy Hughes became prime minister in 1915 and after the Labor Party split of 1916 followed Hughes to the National Labor Party and then to the Nationalists Pearce also served in cabinet under Stanley Bruce and after joining the UAP in 1931 Joseph Lyons He was Minister for Defence from 1908 to 1909 1910 to 1913 1914 to 1921 and 1932 to 1934 His 24 years in cabinet and 37 years as a senator are both records Contents 1 Early life 2 Early political career 2 1 Fisher governments 3 Defence minister 1914 1921 3 1 World War I 3 2 Aftermath 4 Post war politics 4 1 Bruce Page government 4 2 Lyons government 5 Later life 6 Personal life 7 Legacy 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksEarly life editPearce was born on 14 January 1870 in Mount Barker South Australia He was the fifth of eleven children born to Jane nee Foster and James Pearce 1 His father was a blacksmith of Cornish descent born in the village of Altarnun while his mother was born in London 2 An uncle George Pearce briefly served in the South Australian House of Assembly 3 During Pearce s childhood his family lived in various locations in rural South Australia His mother died when he was ten years old and he left school the following year by which time the family was living in Redhill His father briefly tried wheat farming on the Eyre Peninsula then moved the family to Kilkerran on the Yorke Peninsula where he returned to blacksmithing Pearce began working as a farm labourer at the age of twelve in nearby Maitland He took up a carpentry apprenticeship in Maitland in 1885 where he also received free evening lessons from the local school headmaster He moved to Adelaide after completing his apprenticeship but lost his job in the early 1890s depression 2 In 1892 Pearce moved to Western Australia where he found work as a carpenter in Perth Following the discovery of gold at Coolgardie he left Perth in March 1894 and went to the Eastern Goldfields where he joined thousands of others in prospecting for alluvial gold 2 While camped at Kurnalpi Pearce and two others were attacked by Wangkatha men armed with spears to which he responded by firing his revolver three times He had little success in prospecting and returned to Perth in 1895 4 After returning to Perth Pearce resumed his work as a carpenter and his involvement in the labour movement where he was a member of the Amalgamated Society of Carpenters and Joiners 4 In the late 1890s he became one of Perth s most prominent trade unionists 3 The local labour movement at the time largely consisted of small craft unions of skilled tradesmen with an atmosphere less militant than in the other Australian colonies 4 In 1897 Pearce nonethless led a strike on building sites that led to him being blacklisted for several weeks 3 5 In the same year he purchased a home in the working class suburb of Subiaco working at the local Whittaker Bros timber mill 4 Early political career edit nbsp Pearce in 1901 In 1893 Pearce helped found the Progressive Political League a precursor to the Western Australian branch of the ALP 1 He was elected to the Subiaco Municipal Council in 1898 4 In the lead up to Federation in 1901 Pearce joined the executive of the Western Australian Federal League and campaigned for the Yes vote at the referendum in July 1900 which approved Western Australia as an original state A Trades and Labour Conference held in Perth in August 1900 agreed that labour candidates for the inaugural federal election would be subject to a preselection process for the House of Representatives and that the conference would endorse two candidates for the Senate one from Perth and one from the Eastern Goldfields 6 Pearce was selected as the labour candidate from Perth and was elected to a six year Senate term at the March 1901 federal election He joined the parliamentary Australian Labor Party ALP on its formation in May 1901 7 In Pearce s maiden speech to parliament he outlined his views as a moderate socialist and looked forward to a time where the representatives of labour and capital could join hands to the advantage of both 8 He also called for the nationalisation of natural monopolies and in 1906 introduced an unsuccessful private member s bill to amend the constitution to that effect Pearce was one of the few free traders in the Labor Party in his first years in parliament believing high tariff policies made imports more expensive for Western Australia and had few benefits given the state s limited secondary industries 9 He narrowly missed out on being a member of the first Labor Party cabinet when Chris Watson became Prime Minister in 1904 He was later Chairman of Committees in the Senate from 1907 to 1908 10 Fisher governments edit In 1908 Pearce was elected to cabinet by the ALP caucus as a member of the first Fisher Ministry He had long shown an interest in defence matters in the Senate and was chosen by Prime Minister Andrew Fisher to become Minister for Defence 11 He believed it was his duty as minister to accept any reasonable expenditure on armament ammunition and accoutrements recommended by his advisers and to resolve disagreements between sections of the military 12 During his first term as minister Pearce ordered three River class torpedo boat destroyers for the what would become the Royal Australian Navy 3 Pearce regained the defence portfolio in the second Fisher Ministry 1910 1913 During his second term as minister he was responsible for the Naval Defence Act 1910 which created the Australian Commonwealth Naval Board and the Royal Australian Naval College 1 In 1911 he announced that orders had been placed for Australia s first two submarines AE1 and AE2 13 Pearce attended the 1911 Imperial Conference in London where the relationship between the Royal Navy and Royal Australian Navy was determined He oversaw the implementation of the Universal Service Scheme of compulsory military training scheme and in 1912 approved the creation of the Central Flying School at Point Cook Victoria which became the birthplace of Australian military aviation 3 Defence minister 1914 1921 editWorld War I edit nbsp Pearce photographed by Alice Mills in the 1910s In 1914 Australia entered World War I Upon Billy Hughes ascension as Prime Minister Pearce was named Deputy Leader of the party 1 Pearce served as acting prime minister from January to August 1916 while Hughes was in England and France 14 He was the first senator to hold the position and the only senator to do so until Bill Spooner in 1962 15 Outside of the defence portfolio Pearce oversaw the creation of Advisory Council of Science and Industry the predecessor of the CSIRO which Hughes had approved before his departure In March 1916 he used the War Precautions Act 1914 to set price controls on bread and flour in metropolitan areas On 6 July he extended this to all other foods and on 20 July he created the Necessary Commodities Commission with the power to set prices on any item 16 By the time of Hughes return Australia s prosecution of the war made the introduction of conscription an intensely divisive issue for the ALP Pearce was convinced of the necessity of introducing conscription but the majority of his party did not agree Pearce along with many other of the party s founding members subsequently followed Hughes out of the party and into the new National Labor Party A few months later the National Labor Party merged with the Commonwealth Liberal Party to form the Nationalist Party with Hughes as its leader 1 Aftermath edit nbsp Caricature of Pearce by John Henry Chinner c 1920 In December 1918 following the signing of the Armistice of 11 November 1918 which ended World War I it was announced that Pearce would be sent to London to oversee the demobilisation and repatriation of Australian troops although a separation Repatriation Department had been established in 1917 headed by Edward Millen 17 The announcement received public criticism from those dissatisfied with his performance as defence minister and a crowd gathered to boo and cat call Pearce as his ship left Melbourne in January 1919 18 In London Pearce faced a number of challenges including conflict with British authorities over the availability of troop transport ships 19 In September 1919 he signed the Treaty of Saint Germain en Laye with Austria on behalf of Australia He returned to Australia the following month in time to campaign at the 1919 federal election 20 In January 1920 Pearce and navy minister Joseph Cook approved the proposal of the Air Service Committee to establish the Australian Air Force as a standalone service arm successfully lobbying cabinet for its independence from the army and navy 20 In the same month he convened the Senior Officers Conference to report on the size and structure of Australia s post war military 21 He approved the report s recommendations around the reorganisation of the Citizen Military Force and retention of compulsory military training but rejected a proposal to amend the Defence Act to allow Australian soldiers to serve overseas as part of British expeditionary forces 22 Pearce was the Australian representative at the Washington Naval Conference of 1921 23 Post war politics editBruce Page government edit Most of the defectors to the Nationalists subsequently faded into obscurity but Pearce went on to have a successful career in the party of his erstwhile opponents After Hughes was deposed as Nationalist leader Pearce accepted a position in the ministry of Hughes successor and rival Stanley Bruce As Minister for Home and Territories he showed a particular interest in the Northern Territory and was the driving force behind its division in 1927 into separate territories of Central Australia and North Australia It was reversed by the Scullin government in 1931 1 He became the first Father of the Senate in 1923 He was appointed a Knight Commander of the Royal Victorian Order KCVO in 1927 24 Lyons government edit nbsp Pearce in 1927 In January 1932 following the UAP s victory at the 1931 election Pearce was appointed defence minister for a fourth time 25 He articulated the defence policies that he had supported throughout his career in a September 1933 speech to the Millions Club in Sydney an efficient Australian navy capable of operating with the Royal Navy a well equipped army based on a militia a modern air force armaments and munitions factories and a closer defence relationship with New Zealand 26 Pearce s speech attracted international attraction for its commitment to rearmament a policy subsequently adopted by the United Kingdom and other dominions later in the 1930s He announced announced that the Lyons government would allocate an additional 1 5 million in defence expenditure 27 effectively doubling the previous year s defence budget and reversing cuts made during the Great Depression 28 Following the 1934 federal election Pearce requested to be removed from the defence portfolio which had begun to exhaust him He was instead appointed Minister for External Affairs in October 1934 although he continued to maintain an interest in defence policy 29 He played no significant role in formulating policy but helped establish his department as an institution in its own right expanding the diplomatic corps and supporting the establishment of one of Australia s first foreign affairs journals Current Notes on International Affairs 30 The external affairs department had previously been run as a branch of the Prime Minister s Department and did not receive its own separate head until 1935 31 As external affairs minister Pearce supported the Lyons government s diplomatic policy of appeasement of Imperial Japan while Australia continued to rearm In October 1935 he told U S consul general Jay Pierrepont Moffat that the government remained suspicious of Japan s ultimate intentions but with British naval strength reduced below the safety point and with American aid discounted there was no policy open to her other than trying to be friendly with Japan and to give her no excuse to adopt an aggressive policy vis a vis the Commonwealth 32 He later echoed Lyons calls for a Pacific non aggression treaty between the United States and Japan 33 Pearce campaigned for the No vote in the 1933 Western Australian secession referendum touring the state with Lyons and Tom Brennan for two weeks The Yes vote won almost a two thirds majority but ultimately secession did not occur 34 Pearce s opposition to secession played a key role in his defeat at the 1937 federal election along with claims he had failed to defend Western Australia s interests and had not visited the state often enough The pro secession Sunday Times ran an anti Pearce editorial line while the Dominion League of Western Australia and the Wheatgrowers Union ran a Put Pearce Last campaign 35 He resigned as a minister after the election and spent the remainder of his term as a backbencher concluding his service on 30 June 1938 36 He was a senator for 37 years and three months a record term His total service as a minister was 24 years and seven months also a record in the Australian Parliament 1 Later life editPearce made no attempts to re enter parliament after his defeat He served on the Commonwealth Grants Commission from 1939 to 1944 and as chairman of the Defence Board of Business Administration from 1940 until it was abolished in 1947 3 Prime Minister John Curtin retained him in the latter position despite the opposition of some within the Labor Party including Arthur Calwell and Eddie Ward 37 The board supervised all defence expenditure of over 10 000 1 Pearce had lived mainly in Melbourne since entering the Senate but co owned a farm in Tenterden Western Australia with his son and visited regularly 3 He published an autobiography Carpenter to Cabinet in 1951 which had been written over a decade earlier 1 Pearce died at his home in Elwood on 24 June 1952 aged 82 3 At the time of his death he was the last surviving member of the first Australian Senate elected at Federation in 1901 MHRs Billy Hughes and King O Malley from the First Parliament would outlive him 1 Personal life editIn 1897 Pearce married Eliza Maud Barrett a domestic servant at Trinity Church Perth 4 They had two sons and two daughters together 1 He was widowed in 1947 38 His great granddaughter Jane Prentice was elected to federal parliament in 2010 39 Legacy editPlaces named in Pearce s honour include RAAF Base Pearce and the electoral Division of Pearce in Western Australia Pearce Peak in Antarctica and the Canberra suburb of Pearce Australia s longest serving prime minister Robert Menzies wrote the introduction to Peter Heydon s 1965 biography of Pearce Quiet Decision and recalled that he had never sat with an abler man than George Pearce in cabinet Menzies praised Pearce s profound and reflective mind analytical way of thinking and ability to express ideas and policy recommendations 3 References edit a b c d e f g h i j k Beddie B 1988 Pearce Sir George Foster 1870 1952 Australian Dictionary of Biography National Centre of Biography Australian National University ISSN 1833 7538 Retrieved 20 October 2007 a b c Connor 2011 p 6 a b c d e f g h i Pearce Sir George Foster 1870 1952 The Biographical Dictionary of the Australian Senate Retrieved 30 November 2022 a b c d e f Connor 2011 p 7 Merritt John 1962 George Foster Pearce and the Perth Building Trades Strike of 1897 Bulletin of the Australian Society for the Study of Labour History 3 5 22 Connor 2011 p 8 Connor 2011 p 9 Connor 2011 p 10 Connor 2011 p 11 Appendix 3 Deputy Presidents and Chairmen of Committees 1901 2009 Parliament of Australia Archived from the original on 18 May 2019 Retrieved 10 September 2017 Connor 2011 p 16 Connor 2011 p 17 Australian Navy Submarines Ordered The Sydney Morning Herald 8 February 1911 Connor 2011 p 77 Spooner Acting Prime Minister The Canberra Times 1 September 1962 Archived from the original on 15 April 2019 Retrieved 2 November 2019 Connor 2011 p 78 Connor 2011 pp 129 131 Connor 2011 p 131 Connor 2011 pp 132 133 a b Connor 2011 p 136 Connor 2011 p 137 Connor 2011 p 138 Connor 2011 pp 139 141 It s an Honour KCVO Archived from the original on 26 May 2011 Retrieved 20 January 2009 Connor 2011 p 146 Connor 2011 pp 145 146 Connor 2011 p 145 Connor 2011 p 151 Connor 2011 pp 161 163 Connor 2011 p 165 Connor 2011 p 163 Connor 2011 pp 163 164 Connor 2011 p 164 Henderson Anne 2011 Joseph Lyons The People s Prime Minister UNSW Press pp 343 344 ISBN 978 1742240992 Connor 2011 pp 165 166 Connor 2011 p 166 McMullin 1991 p 215 Connor 2011 p 167 Prentice Jane 29 September 2010 Maiden speech Parliament of Australia Archived from the original on 31 May 2019 Retrieved 2 November 2019 Further reading editConnor John 2011 Anzac and Empire George Foster Pearce and the Foundations of Australian Defence Cambridge University Press Ling Ted 2011 George Pearce and Development of the North 1921 37 Commonwealth Government Records about the Northern Territory PDF National Archives of Australia pp 39 56 ISBN 9781920807863 Heydon Peter 1965 Quiet Decision A Study of George Foster Pearce Melbourne University Press McMullin Ross 1991 The Light on the Hill The Australian Labor Party 1891 1991 South Melbourne Oxford University Press Australia ISBN 0 19 553451 4 Pearce George 1951 Carpenter to Cabinet Thirty Seven Years of Parliament Hutchinson External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to George Pearce Australian politician Parliament of Australia New title Senator for Western Australia1901 1938 Succeeded byRobert Clothier Political offices Preceded byThomas Ewing Minister for Defence1908 1909 Succeeded byJoseph Cook Preceded byJoseph Cook Minister for Defence1910 1913 Succeeded byEdward Millen Preceded byEdward Millen Minister for Defence1914 1921 Succeeded byWalter Massy Greene Preceded byAlexander Poynton Minister for Home and Territories1921 1926 Succeeded byWilliam Glasgow Preceded byLlewellyn Atkinson Vice President of the Executive Council1926 1929 Succeeded byJohn Daly Preceded byBen Chifley Minister for Defence1932 1934 Succeeded byArchdale Parkhill Preceded byJohn Latham Minister for External Affairs1934 1937 Succeeded byBilly Hughes Preceded byHarry Lawson Minister in charge of Territories1934 1937 Party political offices Preceded byBilly Hughes Deputy Leader of the Australian Labor Party1915 1916 Succeeded byAlbert Gardiner Preceded byGregor McGregor Leader of the Australian Labor Party in the Senate1914 1916 New political party Leader of the National Labor Party in the Senate1916 1917 Defunct political party Preceded byEdward Millen Leader of the Nationalist Party in the Senate1923 1931 Defunct political party New political party Leader of the United Australia Party in the Senate1931 1937 Succeeded byAlexander McLachlan Honorary titles Preceded byfirst Earliest serving living Senator1951 1952 Succeeded byTed Needham Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title George Pearce amp oldid 1215425214, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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