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Joseph Cahill

John Joseph Cahill (21 January 1891 – 22 October 1959), also known as Joe Cahill or J. J. Cahill, was a long-serving New South Wales politician, railway worker, trade unionist and Labor Party Premier of New South Wales from 1952 to his death in 1959. Born the son of Irish migrants in Redfern, New South Wales, Cahill worked for the New South Wales Government Railways from the age of 16 before joining the Australian Labor Party. Being a prominent unionist organiser, including being dismissed for his role in the 1917 general strike, Cahill was eventually elected to the Parliament of New South Wales for St George in 1925.

Joseph Cahill
29th Premier of New South Wales
Elections: 1953, 1956, 1959
In office
2 April 1952 – 22 October 1959
MonarchElizabeth II
GovernorSir John Northcott
Sir Eric Woodward
DeputyBob Heffron
Preceded byJames McGirr
Succeeded byBob Heffron
3rd Deputy Premier of New South Wales
In office
21 September 1949 – 2 April 1952
PremierJames McGirr
Preceded byJack Baddeley
Succeeded byRobert Heffron
Secretary for Public Works
In office
16 May 1941 – 2 April 1952
PremierWilliam McKell
James McGirr
Preceded byLewis Martin
Succeeded byJack Renshaw
Minister for Local Government
In office
8 June 1944 – 2 April 1952
PremierWilliam McKell
James McGirr
Preceded byJames McGirr
Succeeded byJack Renshaw
Member of the New South Wales Parliament
for Cook's River
In office
10 May 1941 – 22 October 1959
Preceded byNew district
Succeeded byTom Cahill
Personal details
Born(1891-01-21)21 January 1891
Redfern, Colony of New South Wales
Died22 October 1959(1959-10-22) (aged 68)
Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
Resting placeRookwood Cemetery
Political partyNew South Wales Labor Party
Spouse(s)Esmey Mary Kelly
(b.1891–m.1922–d.1971)
ChildrenThomas James Cahill (1924–1983)
John Joseph Cahill (1926–2006)
Brian Francis Cahill (1930–2013)
Mary (Gemma) Cahill
Margaret Cahill[1]

After many years of backbench service, including a term outside of parliament, Cahill was eventually appointed Secretary for Public Works in 1941 and Minister for Local Government in the government of William McKell in 1944, where he led significant reforms of local government in the state, including establishing a Royal commission in 1945, and passing the landmark Local Government (Areas) Act of 1948. Promoted to Deputy Premier in 1949, Cahill became Premier of New South Wales from April 1952 to his death in October 1959. His term as premier is primarily remembered for his government's role in post-war infrastructure development, which included the commissioning of the Sydney Opera House and construction of the expressway which now bears his name.

Early years and family edit

Joe Cahill, as he was popularly known, was born on 21 January 1891 in the inner-Sydney suburb of Redfern, the son of Irish-born parents, Thomas Cahill, and Ellen Glynn. Cahill's father was born in County Limerick and was a NSW railways labourer at the nearby Eveleigh Railway Workshops, and his mother was the daughter of Irish immigrants from County Clare.[2][3] After being educated at St Brigid's, Marrickville, and Patrician Brothers' School, Redfern, at age 16 he was apprenticed as a fitter for the New South Wales Government Railways at the Eveleigh railway workshops on 2 July 1907.[4]

As a member of the Workers' Educational Association and the Marrickville branch of the Amalgamated Society of Engineers (known from 1921 as the Amalgamated Engineering Union [AEU]), Cahill became politically active and joined the NSW Branch of the Labor Party. Like most Roman Catholics within the Labor Party he opposed conscription for the First World War in 1916, and lost his railway job on 14 August 1917 after taking part in a general strike over railway workers' pay and conditions.[4]

Cahill also made his first attempt to enter politics as a member of the Parliament of New South Wales, when he stood as the Labor candidate for the Legislative Assembly seat of Dulwich Hill at the March 1917 election. Bearing the marks of a young radical, Cahill campaigned on big ideas like the abolition of the Legislative Council and replacing the state Governor with the Lieutenant-Governor, but his comment that "the wealth of the country should be placed in one big pool" attracted amusement in the press.[5][6][7] Cahill was subsequently defeated on a margin of 31-68% against the sitting Nationalist Party member, Tom Hoskins.[8]

On 17 February 1918 his younger brother who also worked in the New South Wales railways, Sapper Thomas James Cahill, of the 4th Field Company (4th Division), Australian Engineers, was killed in action in France.[9][10] His father had also died in June 1916 at the age of 58 while on active service as a reservist Sergeant-Major in the Australian Garrison Artillery.[11] After a period of difficult unemployment, Cahill found some work selling insurance amongst other temporary jobs, but was re-employed by the New South Wales Government Railways in mid-1922 at the Randwick Tramway Workshops.[12][13]

On 11 November 1922, at St Brigid's Church, Marrickville, he married Esmey Mary Kelly, the daughter of public servant James Joseph Kelly,[14] and they were to have three sons and two daughters. When their first son was born on 12 February 1924, they named him "Thomas James" after Cahill's younger brother.[15] On 11 December 1926, another son was born, who they named John Joseph Cahill.[16] A third son, Brian Francis Cahill, was born on 10 December 1930.[17][18]

In 1922, after taking part in an unsuccessful attempt to unseat the AEU's NSW governing body through a federal council, Cahill among several others was sued by the union for "illegally holding office within the union".[19] Although the suit was later dismissed by the Chief Judge in Equity, Philip Street, Cahill was banned from holding office in the union until 1925.[4][20][21]

Early political career edit

 
Cahill as Party Whip, with NSW Labor Treasurer, Tom Shannon.

Eight years after his first tilt at state politics, Cahill was elected as one of the members of the NSW Legislative Assembly seat of St George at the 1925 state election, which brought the Labor party back into government under Jack Lang.[22][23] He was never counted among the close allies of Lang, and remained on the backbench throughout Lang's two terms in government. Cahill, along with half of the parliamentary caucus, supported Peter Loughlin, when the latter challenged Lang for the party leadership in September 1926.[4] With the abolition of the St George constituency in 1930, Cahill ran for Arncliffe and was appointed party whip.[24][12] However, Cahill lost his bid to be re-elected for Arncliffe to United Australia Party's Horace Harper, at the 1932 election, with the electoral tide sweeping out the dismissed Lang Labor government.[25]

This defeat, nevertheless, proved to be only a temporary setback, and Cahill found work as a shop inspector for a shoe retailer in the interim. Retaining his interest in political matters, Cahill (despite his earlier support of Loughlin) stayed loyal to Lang when many in the ALP had deserted the flamboyant ex-Premier. He exclaimed to an Arncliffe Labor meeting: "Mr. Lang is the greatest friend the workers have ever had, and time will prove that Lang is right."[26] In 1935, Cahill was returned to parliament in Arncliffe for the State Labor Party despite the overall defeat at the election, declaring that while "the Press had poisoned the minds of the people, [...] ten years after he was dead the Press would proclaim Mr. Lang as the greatest hero Australia had seen for many a long day."[27][28]

With Lang's leadership in doubt after a further election loss in 1938, Cahill abandoned his former praise of Lang, and he backed a caucus motion to support federal intervention in the state branch's factional infighting which had led to several of his colleagues defecting to the Industrial Labor Party, led by Bob Heffron, the member representing Botany in Sydney's south-east.[29][30][31] Cahill subsequently supported William McKell, when he successfully challenged Lang for the Labor Party leadership in September 1939, and was elected to the party executive.[32]

A frequent speaker in the assembly, Cahill often addressed his fellow parliamentarians on railway-related matters and lobbied the government (unsuccessfully) for an extension of the Cooks River Tram Line to Arncliffe.[33][34][35] Cahill was the Labor Party campaign director for the September 1940 federal election, which resulted in the ALP under John Curtin gaining the popular vote and winning three additional seats from Robert Menzies' United Australia Party Government, which was forced into minority status, and later fell in a confidence vote in October 1941.[36]

Minister of the Crown edit

 
The new McKell ministry's first executive council meeting, 16 May 1941, Cahill is 4th left.

The Labor Party swept back into office at the May 1941 election, winning 26 seats over the United Australia Party's (UAP) loss of 33 seats, and McKell was commissioned by the Governor, Lord Wakehurst, to form a government.[37] When Arncliffe was abolished at the 1941 election, Cahill switched to the new electorate of Cook's River.[38] On 16 May 1941, Cahill was sworn in along with the rest of the ministry as Secretary of Public Works by the Governor at Government House.[39][40]

Commencing office during wartime, Cahill's role as Public Works minister was crucial through the direction of various projects to facilitate continued economic growth and in support of the war effort. The government had long supported the re-establishment of a state shipbuilding enterprise following the UAP Government of Bertram Stevens closing the NSW Government Dockyard in Newcastle in 1933, and consequently in 1942 Cahill directed the opening of the NSW Government Engineering and Shipbuilding Undertaking (known as the State Dockyard) in Newcastle, which was enshrined in the passage of the Government Engineering and Shipbuilding Undertaking Act, 1943. On his role, Cahill declared:

"There was a time when the Public Works Department of New South Wales was a great organisation which built ships and bridges, and had large teams of men engaged on public works in all parts of the State. It has been my ambition to build up this department to the pinnacle it occupied in those days; to build ships and do other great engineering works, and to ensure that the whole organisation was keyed up in such a way as to afford a maximum defence effort while still performing urgent civilian public works. [...] This Government was pledged to re-establish shipbuilding as a State enterprise. The Premier entrusted this responsibility to me, and the job has been done. Within a year of taking-office we were able to say that we were building a ship to the order of the Australian Shipbuilding Board. Our engineering and shipbuilding undertaking is destined to become one of the great institutions of the Commonwealth, both in war and peace years, for it has been planned in such a way that its activities can be swung from one engineering project to another easily and smoothly."[41]

Other projects commenced included various war works such as defence installations, air fields, prisoner-of-war camps, alongside important civil improvements to water and electricity infrastructure which were not delayed due to the war.[41][42] By 1943, Cahill was already heavily involved in post-war infrastructure planning, with the McKell Government enabling significant investment in new public works projects such as new ports and roads.[43] With the launching of the 22nd vessel from the State Dockyard in October 1945, Cahill declared that he was proud to have been involved in its successful re-establishment and noted that the Dockyard would "continue to play a significant part in the permanent establishment of shipbuilding, which is so essential to the industrial development of the Commonwealth."[44] As the Government had predicted, with the end of the war came a great need for new investment in infrastructure, and in 1946 Cahill introduced new bills for substantial projects such as £1.7 million for a new Mental Hospital at North Ryde and £600,000 for works to dredge and improve the Cooks River and Wolli Creek.[45]

 
Cahill as Minister for Local Government in 1944.

In 1944 Cahill became Minister for Local Government, a position he would hold for eight years; he used this position to augment local governments' powers. He established the State Brickworks at Homebush Bay. In addition, he supervised the establishment of the Electricity Commission of New South Wales, which brought electricity to much of rural New South Wales, and the Cumberland County Council, which developed the landmark county planning scheme in 1948.[4]

In September 1949, the serving Deputy Premier, Jack Baddeley, announced his retirement from parliament and his appointment as Director of the State Coal Mines Control Board,[46][47] and Cahill stood to succeed him as deputy.[46][48][49] At the caucus meeting on 21 September, Cahill was elected Deputy Premier 21 votes to 20 against Attorney-General Clarence Martin.[50][51]

Premier of New South Wales edit

 
Cahill in his office as Premier in 1956.

When James McGirr announced his resignation as premier on the grounds of ill health on 1 April 1952, Cahill, a natural successor as deputy, put himself forward as a candidate to succeed McKell. He ran against Clive Evatt, William Francis Sheahan, Bob Heffron (by this time Education Minister), and Clarence Martin (still Attorney-General).[52] However, the day before the ballot on 3 April, Heffron had been made aware that he would not have the numbers in caucus to win against Cahill, and consequently made arrangements to give the votes of his bloc to Cahill, in exchange for Cahill giving him support to become Deputy Premier. As a result, on 3 April Cahill defeated the only remaining rival for the premiership, namely Martin (Sheahan and Evatt had withdrawn from the contest), by 32 votes to 14. Heffron defeated Mines Secretary Joshua Arthur by 32 votes to 14 to become Deputy Premier.[53][54][55]

Cahill won the state elections of 1953, 1956, and 1959. In November 1958, he officially opened the Wangi Power Station on Lake Macquarie.[56]

Sydney Opera House edit

It was in November 1954 that Cahill first began to champion the idea of an opera house in Sydney on the site of the old Fort Macquarie Tram Depot at Bennelong Point. He announced an international competition for its design in September 1955. This competition was subsequently won by the Danish architect Jørn Utzon in January 1957.[57] In August 1957, Cahill responded to criticisms that the opera house was an extravagance and inaccessible to the ordinary public by noting that, "the building when erected will be available for the use of every citizen, that the average working family will be able to afford to go there just as well as people in more favourable economic circumstances, that there will be nothing savouring even remotely of a class conscious barrier and that the Opera House will, in fact, be a monument to democratic nationhood in its fullest sense."[58]

On 5 February 1959, Cahill signed the contract for the first stage of building works for the Opera House with the Chairman of Lendlease Corporation and Civil & Civic, Dick Dusseldorp, and the managing director of Brederos, Jan de Vries.[59] On the occasion of the official start of building and the laying of the foundation plaque on 2 March 1959, Cahill declared that the Sydney Opera House, "will stand not merely as an outstanding example of modern architecture or even as a world famous opera house, but as a shrine in which the great artists of the world may be seen and heard and our own artists may display the flowering of Australian culture."[58]

 
The Cahills greeting Queen Elizbeth II and Prince Philip for a State Dinner held at the David Jones Elizabeth Street Store, 4 February 1954.

Sectarian tensions edit

Cahill's political skills, his determination to avoid another Lang-style split in the party, and his government's, and indeed personal, close alliance with Sydney's Catholic Archbishop, Cardinal Norman Gilroy, ensured that Labor in New South Wales avoided the devastating divisions which forced the party out of office in Victoria, Western Australia, and Queensland during the 1950s split.[60]

Illness and death in office edit

A heavy smoker, Cahill suffered increasingly poor health during 1959, with Deputy Premier Bob Heffron often acting in Cahill's place during these times. He died at Sydney Hospital of a myocardial infarction in October of that year and Heffron succeeded him unopposed in the premiership.[61] No premier of New South Wales before him had continuously remained in power as long as Cahill did and no later premier would manage to surpass the length of Cahill's tenure until Robert Askin in 1972.

Honours and legacy edit

 
Family grave of Cahill at Rookwood Cemetery.

Survived by his wife, Esmey, daughters Gemma and Margaret, and sons Tom, John and Brian, Cahill was granted a state funeral and was laid-in-state at St Mary's Cathedral, Sydney.[61][62] His funeral at the cathedral was attended by over 3,000 people, including Governor Sir Eric Woodward, Prime Minister Robert Menzies and Opposition Leader H V Evatt, and it was estimated that around 200,000 people lined the route from the cathedral to his burial place at Rookwood Cemetery. In his panegyric, Cardinal Norman Gilroy praised Cahill as a "man of immaculate integrity".[63]

His eldest son, Thomas James Cahill, was elected to his father's vacated seat of Cook's River at the subsequent December by-election and served as an MP until his death in 1983.[15] His second son and namesake, John Joseph Cahill, served as a judge of the Industrial Commission of New South Wales from 1971 to 1998.[64] His wife, Esmey Cahill, died at the age of 79 on 21 June 1971 at the Cahill's long-term home at 44 Warren Road, Marrickville, and was buried beside her husband in the family plot at Rookwood Cemetery.[65]

Over the years Cahill was given several awards. As a Member of Parliament, he received the King George VI Coronation Medal (1937), and Cahill and Esmey Cahill received the Queen Elizabeth II Coronation Medal (1953).[66][67] He received an honorary Doctor of Laws (LL.D.) from the University of Sydney in 1952, an honorary Doctor of Science (D.Sc.) from the New South Wales University of Technology in 1955, and an honorary Doctor of Literature (D.Litt.) from the University of New England in 1956.[68][69][70] On 17 December 1958, the City of Sydney decided to name the new highway across Circular Quay as the "Cahill Expressway", and Cahill was present when the Blue Mountains City Council officially named the "Cahills Lookout" in Katoomba on 6 June 1959.[71][72] In 1961 the Municipality of Rockdale in his former electorate decided to name the new park in Wolli Creek as "Cahill Park".[73]

Following Cahill's death, the new public high school in Mascot in his former seat of Cook's River also decided to honour his memory, as well as his role in the school's establishment, by naming itself the "J J Cahill Memorial High School", which was officially opened by his widow, Esmey Cahill, on 24 March 1961. On the school's 50th anniversary, the principal Robyn Cowin noted that Cahill "was a man of genuine personal integrity, a family man and a great worker whose deeds spoke for themselves [...] His code of behaviour and indeed the manner of his life embodied the school motto 'Do what is right because it is right'".[74][75]

References edit

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Further reading edit

  • Golding, Peter S (2009), They Called Him old Smoothie: John Joseph Cahill, North Melbourne, Victoria: Australian Scholarly Publishing, ISBN 978-1-921509-53-7
  • Clune, David (2006). "16. Cahill, John Joseph". In Clune, David; Turner, Ken (eds.). The Premiers of New South Wales 1856-2005: Volume 2, 1901-2005. Sydney: The Federation Press. pp. 295–314. ISBN 1-86287-551-0.

 

New South Wales Legislative Assembly
Preceded by Member for St George
1925–1930
With: Arkins, Cann, Gosling, Bagnall
District abolished
New district Member for Arncliffe
1930–1932
Succeeded by
Preceded by Member for Arncliffe
1935–1941
District abolished
New district Member for Cook's River
1941–1959
Succeeded by
Political offices
Preceded by Secretary for Public Works
1941–1952
Succeeded by
Preceded byas Minister for Local Government and Housing Minister for Local Government
1944–1952
Preceded by Deputy Premier of New South Wales
1949 – 1952
Succeeded by
Preceded by Premier of New South Wales
1952–1959
Succeeded by
Treasurer of New South Wales
1952–1959
Preceded by Minister for Transport
1953
Succeeded by
Party political offices
Preceded by Deputy Leader of the New South Wales Labor Party
1949–1952
Succeeded by
Preceded by Leader of the New South Wales Labor Party
1952–1959

joseph, cahill, american, politician, from, york, joseph, cahill, volunteer, cahill, john, january, 1891, october, 1959, also, known, cahill, cahill, long, serving, south, wales, politician, railway, worker, trade, unionist, labor, party, premier, south, wales. For the American politician from New York see Joseph J Cahill For the IRA Volunteer see Joe Cahill John Joseph Cahill 21 January 1891 22 October 1959 also known as Joe Cahill or J J Cahill was a long serving New South Wales politician railway worker trade unionist and Labor Party Premier of New South Wales from 1952 to his death in 1959 Born the son of Irish migrants in Redfern New South Wales Cahill worked for the New South Wales Government Railways from the age of 16 before joining the Australian Labor Party Being a prominent unionist organiser including being dismissed for his role in the 1917 general strike Cahill was eventually elected to the Parliament of New South Wales for St George in 1925 The HonourableJoseph Cahill29th Premier of New South Wales Elections 1953 1956 1959In office 2 April 1952 22 October 1959MonarchElizabeth IIGovernorSir John NorthcottSir Eric WoodwardDeputyBob HeffronPreceded byJames McGirrSucceeded byBob Heffron3rd Deputy Premier of New South WalesIn office 21 September 1949 2 April 1952PremierJames McGirrPreceded byJack BaddeleySucceeded byRobert HeffronSecretary for Public WorksIn office 16 May 1941 2 April 1952PremierWilliam McKellJames McGirrPreceded byLewis MartinSucceeded byJack RenshawMinister for Local GovernmentIn office 8 June 1944 2 April 1952PremierWilliam McKellJames McGirrPreceded byJames McGirrSucceeded byJack RenshawMember of the New South Wales Parliament for Cook s RiverIn office 10 May 1941 22 October 1959Preceded byNew districtSucceeded byTom CahillPersonal detailsBorn 1891 01 21 21 January 1891Redfern Colony of New South WalesDied22 October 1959 1959 10 22 aged 68 Sydney New South Wales AustraliaResting placeRookwood CemeteryPolitical partyNew South Wales Labor PartySpouse s Esmey Mary Kelly b 1891 m 1922 d 1971 ChildrenThomas James Cahill 1924 1983 John Joseph Cahill 1926 2006 Brian Francis Cahill 1930 2013 Mary Gemma CahillMargaret Cahill 1 After many years of backbench service including a term outside of parliament Cahill was eventually appointed Secretary for Public Works in 1941 and Minister for Local Government in the government of William McKell in 1944 where he led significant reforms of local government in the state including establishing a Royal commission in 1945 and passing the landmark Local Government Areas Act of 1948 Promoted to Deputy Premier in 1949 Cahill became Premier of New South Wales from April 1952 to his death in October 1959 His term as premier is primarily remembered for his government s role in post war infrastructure development which included the commissioning of the Sydney Opera House and construction of the expressway which now bears his name Contents 1 Early years and family 2 Early political career 3 Minister of the Crown 4 Premier of New South Wales 4 1 Sydney Opera House 4 2 Sectarian tensions 4 3 Illness and death in office 5 Honours and legacy 6 References 7 Further readingEarly years and family editJoe Cahill as he was popularly known was born on 21 January 1891 in the inner Sydney suburb of Redfern the son of Irish born parents Thomas Cahill and Ellen Glynn Cahill s father was born in County Limerick and was a NSW railways labourer at the nearby Eveleigh Railway Workshops and his mother was the daughter of Irish immigrants from County Clare 2 3 After being educated at St Brigid s Marrickville and Patrician Brothers School Redfern at age 16 he was apprenticed as a fitter for the New South Wales Government Railways at the Eveleigh railway workshops on 2 July 1907 4 As a member of the Workers Educational Association and the Marrickville branch of the Amalgamated Society of Engineers known from 1921 as the Amalgamated Engineering Union AEU Cahill became politically active and joined the NSW Branch of the Labor Party Like most Roman Catholics within the Labor Party he opposed conscription for the First World War in 1916 and lost his railway job on 14 August 1917 after taking part in a general strike over railway workers pay and conditions 4 Cahill also made his first attempt to enter politics as a member of the Parliament of New South Wales when he stood as the Labor candidate for the Legislative Assembly seat of Dulwich Hill at the March 1917 election Bearing the marks of a young radical Cahill campaigned on big ideas like the abolition of the Legislative Council and replacing the state Governor with the Lieutenant Governor but his comment that the wealth of the country should be placed in one big pool attracted amusement in the press 5 6 7 Cahill was subsequently defeated on a margin of 31 68 against the sitting Nationalist Party member Tom Hoskins 8 On 17 February 1918 his younger brother who also worked in the New South Wales railways Sapper Thomas James Cahill of the 4th Field Company 4th Division Australian Engineers was killed in action in France 9 10 His father had also died in June 1916 at the age of 58 while on active service as a reservist Sergeant Major in the Australian Garrison Artillery 11 After a period of difficult unemployment Cahill found some work selling insurance amongst other temporary jobs but was re employed by the New South Wales Government Railways in mid 1922 at the Randwick Tramway Workshops 12 13 On 11 November 1922 at St Brigid s Church Marrickville he married Esmey Mary Kelly the daughter of public servant James Joseph Kelly 14 and they were to have three sons and two daughters When their first son was born on 12 February 1924 they named him Thomas James after Cahill s younger brother 15 On 11 December 1926 another son was born who they named John Joseph Cahill 16 A third son Brian Francis Cahill was born on 10 December 1930 17 18 In 1922 after taking part in an unsuccessful attempt to unseat the AEU s NSW governing body through a federal council Cahill among several others was sued by the union for illegally holding office within the union 19 Although the suit was later dismissed by the Chief Judge in Equity Philip Street Cahill was banned from holding office in the union until 1925 4 20 21 Early political career edit nbsp Cahill as Party Whip with NSW Labor Treasurer Tom Shannon Eight years after his first tilt at state politics Cahill was elected as one of the members of the NSW Legislative Assembly seat of St George at the 1925 state election which brought the Labor party back into government under Jack Lang 22 23 He was never counted among the close allies of Lang and remained on the backbench throughout Lang s two terms in government Cahill along with half of the parliamentary caucus supported Peter Loughlin when the latter challenged Lang for the party leadership in September 1926 4 With the abolition of the St George constituency in 1930 Cahill ran for Arncliffe and was appointed party whip 24 12 However Cahill lost his bid to be re elected for Arncliffe to United Australia Party s Horace Harper at the 1932 election with the electoral tide sweeping out the dismissed Lang Labor government 25 This defeat nevertheless proved to be only a temporary setback and Cahill found work as a shop inspector for a shoe retailer in the interim Retaining his interest in political matters Cahill despite his earlier support of Loughlin stayed loyal to Lang when many in the ALP had deserted the flamboyant ex Premier He exclaimed to an Arncliffe Labor meeting Mr Lang is the greatest friend the workers have ever had and time will prove that Lang is right 26 In 1935 Cahill was returned to parliament in Arncliffe for the State Labor Party despite the overall defeat at the election declaring that while the Press had poisoned the minds of the people ten years after he was dead the Press would proclaim Mr Lang as the greatest hero Australia had seen for many a long day 27 28 With Lang s leadership in doubt after a further election loss in 1938 Cahill abandoned his former praise of Lang and he backed a caucus motion to support federal intervention in the state branch s factional infighting which had led to several of his colleagues defecting to the Industrial Labor Party led by Bob Heffron the member representing Botany in Sydney s south east 29 30 31 Cahill subsequently supported William McKell when he successfully challenged Lang for the Labor Party leadership in September 1939 and was elected to the party executive 32 A frequent speaker in the assembly Cahill often addressed his fellow parliamentarians on railway related matters and lobbied the government unsuccessfully for an extension of the Cooks River Tram Line to Arncliffe 33 34 35 Cahill was the Labor Party campaign director for the September 1940 federal election which resulted in the ALP under John Curtin gaining the popular vote and winning three additional seats from Robert Menzies United Australia Party Government which was forced into minority status and later fell in a confidence vote in October 1941 36 Minister of the Crown edit nbsp The new McKell ministry s first executive council meeting 16 May 1941 Cahill is 4th left The Labor Party swept back into office at the May 1941 election winning 26 seats over the United Australia Party s UAP loss of 33 seats and McKell was commissioned by the Governor Lord Wakehurst to form a government 37 When Arncliffe was abolished at the 1941 election Cahill switched to the new electorate of Cook s River 38 On 16 May 1941 Cahill was sworn in along with the rest of the ministry as Secretary of Public Works by the Governor at Government House 39 40 Commencing office during wartime Cahill s role as Public Works minister was crucial through the direction of various projects to facilitate continued economic growth and in support of the war effort The government had long supported the re establishment of a state shipbuilding enterprise following the UAP Government of Bertram Stevens closing the NSW Government Dockyard in Newcastle in 1933 and consequently in 1942 Cahill directed the opening of the NSW Government Engineering and Shipbuilding Undertaking known as the State Dockyard in Newcastle which was enshrined in the passage of the Government Engineering and Shipbuilding Undertaking Act 1943 On his role Cahill declared There was a time when the Public Works Department of New South Wales was a great organisation which built ships and bridges and had large teams of men engaged on public works in all parts of the State It has been my ambition to build up this department to the pinnacle it occupied in those days to build ships and do other great engineering works and to ensure that the whole organisation was keyed up in such a way as to afford a maximum defence effort while still performing urgent civilian public works This Government was pledged to re establish shipbuilding as a State enterprise The Premier entrusted this responsibility to me and the job has been done Within a year of taking office we were able to say that we were building a ship to the order of the Australian Shipbuilding Board Our engineering and shipbuilding undertaking is destined to become one of the great institutions of the Commonwealth both in war and peace years for it has been planned in such a way that its activities can be swung from one engineering project to another easily and smoothly 41 Other projects commenced included various war works such as defence installations air fields prisoner of war camps alongside important civil improvements to water and electricity infrastructure which were not delayed due to the war 41 42 By 1943 Cahill was already heavily involved in post war infrastructure planning with the McKell Government enabling significant investment in new public works projects such as new ports and roads 43 With the launching of the 22nd vessel from the State Dockyard in October 1945 Cahill declared that he was proud to have been involved in its successful re establishment and noted that the Dockyard would continue to play a significant part in the permanent establishment of shipbuilding which is so essential to the industrial development of the Commonwealth 44 As the Government had predicted with the end of the war came a great need for new investment in infrastructure and in 1946 Cahill introduced new bills for substantial projects such as 1 7 million for a new Mental Hospital at North Ryde and 600 000 for works to dredge and improve the Cooks River and Wolli Creek 45 nbsp Cahill as Minister for Local Government in 1944 In 1944 Cahill became Minister for Local Government a position he would hold for eight years he used this position to augment local governments powers He established the State Brickworks at Homebush Bay In addition he supervised the establishment of the Electricity Commission of New South Wales which brought electricity to much of rural New South Wales and the Cumberland County Council which developed the landmark county planning scheme in 1948 4 In September 1949 the serving Deputy Premier Jack Baddeley announced his retirement from parliament and his appointment as Director of the State Coal Mines Control Board 46 47 and Cahill stood to succeed him as deputy 46 48 49 At the caucus meeting on 21 September Cahill was elected Deputy Premier 21 votes to 20 against Attorney General Clarence Martin 50 51 Premier of New South Wales edit nbsp Cahill in his office as Premier in 1956 See also Cahill ministry 1952 53 Cahill ministry 1953 56 Cahill ministry 1956 59 and Cahill ministry 1959 When James McGirr announced his resignation as premier on the grounds of ill health on 1 April 1952 Cahill a natural successor as deputy put himself forward as a candidate to succeed McKell He ran against Clive Evatt William Francis Sheahan Bob Heffron by this time Education Minister and Clarence Martin still Attorney General 52 However the day before the ballot on 3 April Heffron had been made aware that he would not have the numbers in caucus to win against Cahill and consequently made arrangements to give the votes of his bloc to Cahill in exchange for Cahill giving him support to become Deputy Premier As a result on 3 April Cahill defeated the only remaining rival for the premiership namely Martin Sheahan and Evatt had withdrawn from the contest by 32 votes to 14 Heffron defeated Mines Secretary Joshua Arthur by 32 votes to 14 to become Deputy Premier 53 54 55 Cahill won the state elections of 1953 1956 and 1959 In November 1958 he officially opened the Wangi Power Station on Lake Macquarie 56 Sydney Opera House edit See also Sydney Opera House It was in November 1954 that Cahill first began to champion the idea of an opera house in Sydney on the site of the old Fort Macquarie Tram Depot at Bennelong Point He announced an international competition for its design in September 1955 This competition was subsequently won by the Danish architect Jorn Utzon in January 1957 57 In August 1957 Cahill responded to criticisms that the opera house was an extravagance and inaccessible to the ordinary public by noting that the building when erected will be available for the use of every citizen that the average working family will be able to afford to go there just as well as people in more favourable economic circumstances that there will be nothing savouring even remotely of a class conscious barrier and that the Opera House will in fact be a monument to democratic nationhood in its fullest sense 58 On 5 February 1959 Cahill signed the contract for the first stage of building works for the Opera House with the Chairman of Lendlease Corporation and Civil amp Civic Dick Dusseldorp and the managing director of Brederos Jan de Vries 59 On the occasion of the official start of building and the laying of the foundation plaque on 2 March 1959 Cahill declared that the Sydney Opera House will stand not merely as an outstanding example of modern architecture or even as a world famous opera house but as a shrine in which the great artists of the world may be seen and heard and our own artists may display the flowering of Australian culture 58 nbsp The Cahills greeting Queen Elizbeth II and Prince Philip for a State Dinner held at the David Jones Elizabeth Street Store 4 February 1954 Sectarian tensions edit Cahill s political skills his determination to avoid another Lang style split in the party and his government s and indeed personal close alliance with Sydney s Catholic Archbishop Cardinal Norman Gilroy ensured that Labor in New South Wales avoided the devastating divisions which forced the party out of office in Victoria Western Australia and Queensland during the 1950s split 60 Illness and death in office edit A heavy smoker Cahill suffered increasingly poor health during 1959 with Deputy Premier Bob Heffron often acting in Cahill s place during these times He died at Sydney Hospital of a myocardial infarction in October of that year and Heffron succeeded him unopposed in the premiership 61 No premier of New South Wales before him had continuously remained in power as long as Cahill did and no later premier would manage to surpass the length of Cahill s tenure until Robert Askin in 1972 Honours and legacy edit nbsp Family grave of Cahill at Rookwood Cemetery Survived by his wife Esmey daughters Gemma and Margaret and sons Tom John and Brian Cahill was granted a state funeral and was laid in state at St Mary s Cathedral Sydney 61 62 His funeral at the cathedral was attended by over 3 000 people including Governor Sir Eric Woodward Prime Minister Robert Menzies and Opposition Leader H V Evatt and it was estimated that around 200 000 people lined the route from the cathedral to his burial place at Rookwood Cemetery In his panegyric Cardinal Norman Gilroy praised Cahill as a man of immaculate integrity 63 His eldest son Thomas James Cahill was elected to his father s vacated seat of Cook s River at the subsequent December by election and served as an MP until his death in 1983 15 His second son and namesake John Joseph Cahill served as a judge of the Industrial Commission of New South Wales from 1971 to 1998 64 His wife Esmey Cahill died at the age of 79 on 21 June 1971 at the Cahill s long term home at 44 Warren Road Marrickville and was buried beside her husband in the family plot at Rookwood Cemetery 65 Over the years Cahill was given several awards As a Member of Parliament he received the King George VI Coronation Medal 1937 and Cahill and Esmey Cahill received the Queen Elizabeth II Coronation Medal 1953 66 67 He received an honorary Doctor of Laws LL D from the University of Sydney in 1952 an honorary Doctor of Science D Sc from the New South Wales University of Technology in 1955 and an honorary Doctor of Literature D Litt from the University of New England in 1956 68 69 70 On 17 December 1958 the City of Sydney decided to name the new highway across Circular Quay as the Cahill Expressway and Cahill was present when the Blue Mountains City Council officially named the Cahills Lookout in Katoomba on 6 June 1959 71 72 In 1961 the Municipality of Rockdale in his former electorate decided to name the new park in Wolli Creek as Cahill Park 73 Following Cahill s death the new public high school in Mascot in his former seat of Cook s River also decided to honour his memory as well as his role in the school s establishment by naming itself the J J Cahill Memorial High School which was officially opened by his widow Esmey Cahill on 24 March 1961 On the school s 50th anniversary the principal Robyn Cowin noted that Cahill was a man of genuine personal integrity a family man and a great worker whose deeds spoke for themselves His code of behaviour and indeed the manner of his life embodied the school motto Do what is right because it is right 74 75 References edit MRS CAHILL WILL HAVE A BUSY WEEK The Sydney Morning Herald New South Wales Australia 2 February 1954 p 13 Retrieved 17 April 2021 via National Library of Australia THE LATE SERGT MAJOR THOMAS CAHILL Freeman s Journal New South Wales Australia 8 June 1916 p 31 Retrieved 17 April 2021 via National Library of Australia Mrs Ellen Mary Cahill The Catholic Press New South Wales Australia 11 October 1934 p 11 Retrieved 17 April 2021 via National Library of Australia a b c d e Clune David Cahill John Joseph Joe 1891 1959 Australian Dictionary of Biography National Centre of Biography Australian National University ISSN 1833 7538 Retrieved 22 June 2020 Dulwich Hill The Sydney Morning Herald 9 March 1917 p 8 Retrieved 30 March 2018 via Trove Sam Square s Budget Goulburn Evening Penny Post 17 March 1917 p 2 Retrieved 30 March 2018 via Trove Some splash The St George Call 17 March 1917 p 6 Retrieved 30 March 2018 via Trove Green Antony 1917 Dulwich Hill New South Wales Election Results 1856 2007 Parliament of New South Wales Retrieved 22 June 2020 Thomas James Cahill Discovering ANZACs National Archives of Australia Retrieved 30 March 2018 Thomas James Cahill Roll of Honour Australian War Memorial Retrieved 30 March 2018 DEATH OF SERGEANT MAJOR THOMAS CAHILL The Catholic Press New South Wales Australia 8 June 1916 p 30 Retrieved 17 April 2021 via National Library of Australia a b Mr John Joseph Cahill 1891 1959 Former members of the Parliament of New South Wales Retrieved 5 May 2019 Old Smoothie John Joseph Cahill Eveleigh Stories Australian Technology Park Heritage Retrieved 30 March 2018 OBITUARY Catholic Freeman s Journal New South Wales Australia 4 April 1935 p 38 Retrieved 17 April 2021 via National Library of Australia a b Mr Thomas James Cahill 1924 1983 Former members of the Parliament of New South Wales Retrieved 13 May 2019 Family Notices The Sydney Morning Herald New South Wales Australia 25 December 1926 p 8 Retrieved 17 April 2021 via National Library of Australia Family Notices The Sydney Morning Herald New South Wales Australia 20 December 1930 p 14 Retrieved 17 April 2021 via National Library of Australia Death Notices CAHILL Brian Francis 10 12 1930 11 02 2013 The Sydney Morning Herald 14 February 2013 Retrieved 17 April 2021 The Amalgamated Engineers The Daily Telegraph 23 November 1922 p 8 Retrieved 30 March 2018 via Trove In equity The Sydney Morning Herald 23 November 1922 p 6 Retrieved 30 March 2018 via Trove AEU support The Labor Daily 7 May 1925 p 8 Retrieved 30 March 2018 via Trove Mr J J Cahill Labor Candidate St George Freeman s Journal 28 May 1925 p 19 Retrieved 30 March 2018 via Trove Green Antony 1925 St George New South Wales Election Results 1856 2007 Parliament of New South Wales Retrieved 22 June 2020 Green Antony 1930 Arncliffe New South Wales Election Results 1856 2007 Parliament of New South Wales Retrieved 22 June 2020 Green Antony 1932 Arncliffe New South Wales Election Results 1856 2007 Parliament of New South Wales Retrieved 22 June 2020 Ex MLA amp wife are honored The Labor Daily 2 August 1932 p 7 Retrieved 30 March 2018 via Trove Arncliffe The Sydney Morning Herald 18 May 1935 p 15 Retrieved 30 March 2018 via Trove Green Antony 1935 Arncliffe New South Wales Election Results 1856 2007 Parliament of New South Wales Retrieved 22 June 2020 Mr Lang defeated in caucus The Cessnock Eagle and South Maitland Recorder 28 April 1939 p 7 Retrieved 30 March 2018 via Trove Discord at Arncliffe The Sydney Morning Herald 8 May 1939 p 11 Retrieved 30 March 2018 via Trove Wild scenes at Arncliffe National Advocate 8 May 1939 p 2 Retrieved 30 March 2018 via Trove Defeat of Mr Lang The Sydney Morning Herald No 31 726 New South Wales Australia 6 September 1939 p 15 Retrieved 30 March 2018 via Trove Our transport The St George Call 4 October 1935 p 2 Retrieved 30 March 2018 via Trove Cook s river trams The Propeller 18 May 1939 p 3 Retrieved 30 March 2018 via Trove Cook s river trams The Propeller 8 June 1939 p 2 Retrieved 30 March 2018 via Trove LABOUR HOPES Newcastle Morning Herald And Miners Advocate New South Wales Australia 18 September 1940 p 6 Retrieved 17 April 2021 via National Library of Australia McKELL TO FORM MINISTRY The Daily Telegraph New South Wales Australia 14 May 1941 p 7 Retrieved 17 April 2021 via National Library of Australia Green Antony 1941 Cooks River New South Wales Election Results 1856 2007 Parliament of New South Wales Retrieved 22 June 2020 Labor cabinet is sworn in Newcastle Morning Herald and Miners Advocate 17 May 1941 p 7 Retrieved 30 March 2018 via Trove NEW MINISTRY SWORN IN The Sydney Morning Herald New South Wales Australia 17 May 1941 p 13 Retrieved 17 April 2021 via National Library of Australia a b Big Year in Public Works The Murrumbidgee Irrigator New South Wales Australia 25 September 1942 p 3 Retrieved 17 April 2021 via National Library of Australia BIG YEAR IN PUBLIC WORKS WORKS MINISTER S SURVEY The Australian Worker New South Wales Australia 22 July 1942 p 6 Retrieved 17 April 2021 via National Library of Australia POST WAR PLAN OUTLINED The Sydney Morning Herald New South Wales Australia 13 March 1943 p 11 Retrieved 17 April 2021 via National Library of Australia WELL DONE SAYS MR CAHILL Newcastle Morning Herald And Miners Advocate New South Wales Australia 26 October 1945 p 5 Retrieved 17 April 2021 via National Library of Australia IMPORTANT PUBLIC WORKS Construction New South Wales Australia 20 March 1946 p 3 Retrieved 17 April 2021 via National Library of Australia a b Baddeley to be coal director The Sydney Morning Herald 7 September 1949 p 3 Retrieved 6 April 2018 via Trove State Coal Mines Control Board 1932 1950 NSW State Archives amp Records Retrieved 22 June 2020 Mr Baddeley Resigns Seat The Sydney Morning Herald 9 September 1949 p 4 Retrieved 6 April 2018 via Trove Baddeley s successor poll today The Sydney Morning Herald 14 September 1949 p 3 Retrieved 6 April 2018 via Trove Cahill Deputy Premier Other Cabinet Changes The Sydney Morning Herald 22 September 1949 p 3 Retrieved 6 April 2018 via Trove Vice Regal The Sydney Morning Herald 22 September 1949 p 2 Retrieved 6 April 2018 via Trove 5 may contest premiership Labour leader chosen today Newcastle Morning Herald and Miners Advocate p 1 Retrieved 21 April 2014 via Trove Cahill becomes Premier Wins ballot by 32 To 14 The Sydney Morning Herald 3 April 1952 p 1 Retrieved 21 April 2014 via Trove New Premier s rise from Labour ranks The Sydney Morning Herald 3 April 1952 p 2 Retrieved 30 March 2018 via Trove The new Premier The Propeller 10 April 1952 p 1 Retrieved 30 March 2018 via Trove Premier J J Cahill Lake Macquarie Power Station opening Wangi 7 November 1958 Lake Macquarie City Library City of Lake Macquarie Retrieved 30 March 2018 Sydney Opera House Guide NSW State Archives and Records a b Sydney Opera House Bennelong Point March 2nd 1959 PDF NSW State Archives amp Records NSW Government Printer 2 March 1959 Retrieved 31 March 2018 McQuillan Ern 1926 1959 New South Wales Premier Mr Joseph Cahill signs the contract for the building of the Sydney Opera House observed by Mr Jan de Vries and Mr Gerardus Jozef Dusseldorp 1959 picture Ern McQuillan a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link CS1 maint numeric names authors list link P Golding They called him Old Smoothie John Joseph Cahill Journal of the Australian Catholic Historical Society 31 2 2010 11 75 82 a b High tributes paid to Mr Cahill The Canberra Times 23 October 1959 p 1 Retrieved 30 March 2018 via Trove Mr Heffron sworn in as Premier The Canberra Times 24 October 1959 p 1 Retrieved 30 March 2018 via Trove Funderal service for Mr Cahill The Canberra Times 26 October 1959 p 1 Retrieved 30 March 2018 via Trove McGinness Mark 22 September 2006 Obituary Jurist with a steely reputation John Cahill 1926 2006 The Sydney Morning Herald Retrieved 30 March 2018 Funerals Cahill The Sydney Morning Herald 26 June 1971 p 120 CORONATION MEDALS The Propeller Hurstville New South Wales Australia 20 May 1937 p 3 Retrieved 15 April 2021 via National Library of Australia LIST OF CORONATION MEDAL AWARDS The Sydney Morning Herald New South Wales Australia 2 June 1953 p 6 Retrieved 15 April 2021 via National Library of Australia Honorary awards The Honourable John Joseph Cahill Archives and Records Management Services University of Sydney Retrieved 30 March 2018 Honorary Degree and Fellowship holders UNSW Sydney University of New South Wales Retrieved 4 April 2018 Honorary Degree Recipients since 1955 and Emeritus Professor Awardees since 1964 UNE Council University of New England Retrieved 4 April 2018 The council of the City of Sydney Government Gazette of the State of New South Wales No 3 9 January 1959 p 99 Retrieved 27 March 2018 via Trove K062 Cahills Lookout Heritage search NSW Office of Environment and Heritage Retrieved 3 April 2018 Beichert Kahlia 1 December 2015 Long wait for upgrade Cahill Park improvements may take 15 years St George and Sutherland Shire Leader Retrieved 3 April 2018 Sydney school honours Irish Australian namesake Irish Echo 11 April 2011 Archived from the original on 12 April 2011 Retrieved 30 March 2018 Our School History J J Cahill Memorial High School Retrieved 4 October 2011 Further reading edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Joseph Cahill Golding Peter S 2009 They Called Him old Smoothie John Joseph Cahill North Melbourne Victoria Australian Scholarly Publishing ISBN 978 1 921509 53 7 Clune David 2006 16 Cahill John Joseph In Clune David Turner Ken eds The Premiers of New South Wales 1856 2005 Volume 2 1901 2005 Sydney The Federation Press pp 295 314 ISBN 1 86287 551 0 New South Wales Legislative Assembly Preceded byWilliam Bagnall Member for St George1925 1930 With Arkins Cann Gosling Bagnall District abolished New district Member for Arncliffe1930 1932 Succeeded byHorace Harper Preceded byHorace Harper Member for Arncliffe1935 1941 District abolished New district Member for Cook s River1941 1959 Succeeded byTom Cahill Political offices Preceded byLewis Martin Secretary for Public Works1941 1952 Succeeded byJack Renshaw Preceded byJames McGirras Minister for Local Government and Housing Minister for Local Government1944 1952 Preceded byJack Baddeley Deputy Premier of New South Wales1949 1952 Succeeded byRobert Heffron Preceded byJames McGirr Premier of New South Wales1952 1959 Succeeded byRobert Heffron Treasurer of New South Wales1952 1959 Preceded byClarrie Martin Minister for Transport1953 Succeeded byErnest Wetherell Party political offices Preceded byJack Baddeley Deputy Leader of the New South Wales Labor Party1949 1952 Succeeded byRobert Heffron Preceded byJames McGirr Leader of the New South Wales Labor Party1952 1959 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Joseph Cahill amp oldid 1197722906, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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