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Paul Hasluck

Sir Paul Meernaa Caedwalla Hasluck, KG, GCMG, GCVO, PC (1 April 1905 – 9 January 1993) was an Australian statesman who served as the 17th Governor-General of Australia, in office from 1969 to 1974. Prior to that, he was a Liberal Party politician, holding ministerial office continuously from 1951 to 1969.

Sir Paul Hasluck
Hasluck in 1960
17th Governor-General of Australia
In office
30 April 1969 – 11 July 1974
MonarchElizabeth II
Prime MinisterJohn Gorton
William McMahon
Gough Whitlam
Preceded byThe Lord Casey
Succeeded bySir John Kerr
Minister for External Affairs
In office
24 April 1964 – 11 February 1969
Prime MinisterRobert Menzies
Harold Holt
John McEwen
John Gorton
Preceded byGarfield Barwick
Succeeded byGordon Freeth
Minister for Defence
In office
18 December 1963 – 24 April 1964
Prime MinisterRobert Menzies
Preceded byAthol Townley
Succeeded byShane Paltridge
Minister for Territories
In office
11 May 1951 – 18 December 1963
Prime MinisterRobert Menzies
Preceded byRichard Casey
Succeeded byCharles Barnes
Member of the Australian Parliament
for Curtin
In office
11 December 1949 – 12 February 1969
Preceded byDivision created
Succeeded byVictor Garland
Personal details
Born
Paul Meernaa Caedwalla Hasluck

(1905-04-01)1 April 1905
Fremantle, Western Australia, Australia
Died9 January 1993(1993-01-09) (aged 87)
Dalkeith, Western Australia, Australia
Resting placeKarrakatta Cemetery
Political partyLiberal Party of Australia
Spouse
(m. 1932)

Hasluck was born in Fremantle, Western Australia, and attended Perth Modern School and the University of Western Australia. After graduation he joined the university as a faculty member, eventually becoming a reader in history. Hasluck joined the Department of External Affairs during World War II, and served as Australia's first Permanent Representative to the United Nations from 1946 to 1947. He would later contribute two volumes to Australia in the War of 1939–1945, the official history of Australia's involvement in the war.

In 1949, Hasluck was elected to federal parliament for the Liberal Party, winning the Division of Curtin. In 1951, less than two years after entering politics, he was made Minister for Territories in the Menzies Government. In his twelve years in the position, he initiated transitions toward self-government in Australia's territories, including Nauru, Papua New Guinea, and the Northern Territory. Hasluck later served as Minister for Defence (1963–1964) and Minister for External Affairs (1964–1969). His tenure in those positions covered Australia's involvement in the Indonesia–Malaysia confrontation and the first years of the Vietnam War.

After the disappearance of Harold Holt, Hasluck unsuccessfully stood in the resulting Liberal leadership election. He initially stayed on in cabinet under the new prime minister, John Gorton, but in 1969 Gorton instead nominated him to replace Lord Casey as governor-general. In his five years in the position, Hasluck saw two previous political adversaries (William McMahon and Gough Whitlam) become prime minister; he maintained good working relationships with both. In retirement, he was a prolific author, publishing an autobiography, several volumes of poetry, and multiple works on Australian history.

Early life edit

Hasluck was born on 1 April 1905 in Fremantle, Western Australia, one of five children born to Patience Eliza (née Wooler) and E'thel Meernaa Caedwalla Hasluck.[1] His father was born in England and arrived in Australia in 1876 as a small child.[2] He obtained a position in the colonial postal service and was postmaster in Coolgardie and on the Great Southern Railway, but later resigned to work full-time for the Salvation Army. His mother was born in England and came to Western Australia to work as a domestic servant, also becoming a devout Salvationist where she met her future husband.[3]

Hasluck grew up in relative poverty, with the family often in financial distress as his parents undertook full-time missionary work.[4] He had a "strict religious upbringing" in line with the beliefs and tenets of the Salvation Army, but became estranged from the movement at a young age.[5] As a small child Hasluck spent periods in North Fremantle and in locations around regional Western Australia, including York, Kalgoorlie and Collie. The family lived in Collie for four years, where Hasluck's father ran a boys' home for child migrants, before moving back to Perth in 1916 where he ran the Aged Men's Retreat at Guildford.[6]

After a brief period at the Guildford State School, Hasluck won a scholarship to Perth Modern School which he attended between 1918 and 1922. He was president of the school debating society but later recalled that he lacked in confidence and did not consider going on to further studies. He would eventually enrol in the University of Western Australia six years after leaving school,[6] completing a diploma in journalism on a part-time basis in 1932 and graduating Bachelor of Arts in 1937.[1]

Journalism and academia edit

In 1922, after leaving school, Hasluck joined the staff of The West Australian as a probationary cadet.[5] He was offered a full-time position in 1925 and covered a wide range of areas, including court and police reporting, sporting events, finance and drama and politics. He was eventually placed in charge of the newspaper's press gallery staff at Parliament House and wrote a weekly political column covering state politics. He cultivated a close relationship with the Perth Trades Hall and the union movement, developing a friendship with Westralian Worker editor and future prime minister John Curtin.[7]

While at The West Australian, Hasulck also began to publish articles (in that journal and elsewhere) on the history of the state. After he had obtained his MA, he worked as a tutor in the UWA's history department, and in 1939 he was promoted to a lectureship in history. By that time he had been married for seven years to Alexandra Darker (1908–1993), with whom he had two sons. Alexandra Hasluck became a distinguished writer and historian in her own right, and was the first woman to be appointed a Dame of the Order of Australia.[1] Also in 1939, Hasluck established Freshwater Bay Press,[8] through which he released his first book, Into the Desert. The advent of the Second World War, however, saw the publishing company go into hiatus. The Freshwater Bay Press was later revived by his son Nicholas, and among its subsequent publications it issued a second book of Paul Hasluck's poetry, Dark Cottage in 1984.

In 1941 Hasluck was recruited to the staff of the Department of External Affairs (it acquired the name "Foreign Affairs" only in 1970), and served on Australian delegations to several international conferences, including the San Francisco Conference which founded the United Nations. Here he came into close contact with the Minister for External Affairs in the Labor government, Dr H.V. Evatt, towards whom he conceived a permanent aversion, fully reciprocated by Evatt's attitude to him.

After the war Hasluck returned to the University of Western Australia as a Reader in History, and was commissioned to write two volumes of Australia in the War of 1939–1945, a 22-volume official history of Australia's involvement in World War II. These volumes were published as The Government and the People 1939–1941 in 1951 and The Government and the People 1941–1945 in 1970. This work was interrupted by his decision to enter politics, a decision motivated partly by his disapproval of Evatt's foreign policy.

Political career edit

 
Hasluck in 1953

At the 1949 election Hasluck won Liberal preselection for the newly-created Perth-area seat of Curtin. Although it was notionally a Labor seat, it was located in natural Liberal territory in Perth's wealthy beachside suburbs, and Hasluck won it with a resounding swing of almost 14 percent as part of the Coalition's large victory that year.

In 1951, Prime Minister, Robert Menzies appointed Hasluck as Minister for Territories, a post that he held for twelve years. It gave him responsibility for Australia's colonial possession, Papua New Guinea, and also the Northern Territory, home to Australia's largest population of Aboriginals. Although he shared the paternalistic views of the period about the treatment of the Papua New Guineans and followed an assimilationist policy for Aboriginals he carried out significant reforms in how both peoples were treated.[9]

Hasluck was responsible for the drafting of the bill that became the Welfare Ordinance 1953, which superseded the previous legislation controlling the lives of Aboriginals in the Northern Territory, the Aboriginals Ordinance 1918. There was no explicit reference to race in the Welfare Ordinance, but it made Aboriginals wards of the state. Wards were defined as those who did not have the right to vote, which only applied to Aboriginals.[10][11]

Michael Somare, who became Papua New Guinea's first Prime Minister, said that his country had been able to enter self-government without fear of having to argue with an Ian Smith "simply because of Paul Hasluck".[9]

Hasluck was briefly Minister for Defence in 1963 and 1964, and then became Minister for External Affairs. He held the office during the height of Australia's commitment to the Vietnam War of which he was a passionate supporter. He worked to strengthen Australia's relationship with the United States and with anticommunist governments in South-East Asia and opposed Australian recognition of the People's Republic of China.

Leadership candidate edit

When Prime Minister Harold Holt disappeared in December 1967 and was presumed to have drowned, Hasluck was determined that Treasurer, William McMahon, of whom he had a very low opinion, should not become prime minister. Although he had no great ambitions for himself, Hasluck put his name forward mainly to provide an alternative to McMahon. In the event, McMahon did not stand, as the interim prime minister, John McEwen, had advised his Country Party would not serve in any government headed by McMahon. The choice was between Hasluck, John Gorton, Billy Snedden and Les Bury, but the last two were never considered serious contenders.[12] Many Liberal MPs saw Hasluck as too old at 64, too conservative and insufficiently telegenic to compete with the Labor leader, Gough Whitlam. Accordingly, they chose the younger and more aggressive Gorton.

Governor-General edit

 
Hasluck with Prime Minister William McMahon on 22 March 1971. The two were never close

In early 1969, Gorton offered Hasluck the post of Governor-General, which he accepted. Reportedly, Gorton was uncomfortable having a potential leadership rival in Cabinet. Hasluck resigned from Parliament on 10 February 1969, being the first Western Australian member of the House of Representatives to resign. He was sworn in as Governor-General on 30 April 1969. That may have cost Hasluck a second opportunity to become Prime Minister. Gorton was forced to resign in 1971, and the Liberals might well have turned to Hasluck instead of McMahon if he had still been available.

At the 1972 election, Whitlam defeated McMahon and became Prime Minister. That created a potentially-awkward situation since Whitlam and Hasluck had bitterly resented one another for years. In a celebrated incident in the House of Representatives in 1965, Whitlam had thrown a glass of water at Hasluck after Hasluck had said, "You are one of the filthiest objects ever to come into this chamber".[13] Improbably enough in view, Hasluck and Whitlam treated each other with complete civility, which soon became genuine mutual respect. They had no difficulties in their formal dealings. An indication of the change that had taken place occurred soon after Whitlam's victory. Normal practice called for McMahon to stay on as caretaker Prime Minister until Labor could choose a full ministry at its first caucus meeting. However, Whitlam was unwilling to wait that long and asked Hasluck to have Whitlam and his deputy leader, Lance Barnard, sworn in as an interim two-man government once Labor's victory was beyond doubt. Hasluck promptly agreed, and Whitlam and Barnard held 27 portfolios between them until the full Labor ministry was sworn in.

 
Sir Paul and Lady Hasluck with Queen Juliana of the Netherlands (right)

In 1973, Hasluck's Official Secretary, Sir Murray Tyrrell, retired after a career during which he had served six governors-general over 26 years. He was succeeded by David Smith.

Hasluck granted Whitlam a double dissolution in April 1974 (with an election on 18 May) when the Liberal Opposition threatened to block the Budget bills in the Senate. Hasluck's term as Governor-General was due to expire in July 1974. Whitlam had offered to extend his term, but Hasluck declined, citing his wife's refusal to remain at Yarralumla longer than the originally-agreed five years.[14]

Hasluck's last official act as Governor-General was to open the 29th Parliament on 9 July 1974. Two days later, his successor, Sir John Kerr, was sworn in.[15]

Retirement and legacy edit

Hasluck retired to Perth, where he remained active in cultural and political affairs until his death in 1993. He was buried at Karrakatta Cemetery.[16][17]

Historians of the period are certain that, if Hasluck had still been Governor-General in 1975, the constitutional crisis of that year would have ended differently. Hasluck himself implied this in his 1979 book, The Office of Governor-General, and also in the Queale Lecture. He was even more explicit in his 1985 interview with Clyde Cameron for the National Library of Australia's Oral History series, which was not released until 2010. He said he doubted he would have discussed with anyone but Whitlam about the Senate's 1975 refusal to approve Supply. He also argued that Kerr erred in taking advice from Malcolm Fraser prior to appointing him as prime minister. In Hasluck's view, "the function of the governor-general is not to be the honest broker in political situations".[18]

After Hasluck's death, his son Nicholas Hasluck published a selection of his father's private journals and notebooks, under the title The Chance of Politics. This book contained a number of highly critical comments, both political and personal, about many of Paul Hasluck's contemporaries. The publication of this material caused considerable offence to some people. Others saw the comments as useful historical information.

Set into the footpath along St Georges Terrace, Perth are 150 bronze tablets commemorating notable figures in Western Australia's history, completed as part of WAY 1979. One of the tablets is devoted to Hasluck.

His heraldic banner as Knight Companion of the Garter, from St George's Chapel, Windsor Castle, probably the only one in Australia, was hung in the south transept of St George's Cathedral, Perth, in 1995. The Catherine wheels on the banner were taken from the Armorial Bearings granted to him by the College of Arms. The crest beneath the banner includes the seven-pointed Australian Commonwealth Star and a formalised representation of West Australian Xanthorrhoea.

Honours edit

Hasluck was appointed a Privy Counsellor in 1966. On 21 February 1969, as Governor-General-designate, he was appointed a Knight Grand Cross of the Order of St Michael and St George (GCMG).

During his term as Governor-General, on 29 May 1970, Queen Elizabeth II appointed him a Knight Grand Cross of the Royal Victorian Order (GCVO), an appointment within her personal gift.

Hasluck received the Commemorative Medal of the 2500th Anniversary of the founding of the Persian Empire on 14 October 1971.[19]

On 24 April 1979, he was made a Knight Companion of the Order of the Garter (KG).

The Federal Division of Hasluck is named jointly after Sir Paul and his wife Dame Alexandra Hasluck.

Coat of Arms edit

Coat of arms of Sir Paul Hasluck, KG, GCMG, GCVO
 
Crest
In front of a mullet of seven points Or a Xanthorrhea plant in bloom proper.
Escutcheon
Per pale and per chevron Or and Azure three Catherine wheels within a border counterchanged.
Supporters
Dexter: a pelican proper; Sinister: a cormorant proper
Motto
PERFER ET OBDURA
Orders
Order of the Garter; Order of St Michael and St George; Royal Victorian Order

Bibliography edit

Poetry edit

  • Hasluck, Paul (1939). Into the desert. Claremont, W.A.: Freshwater Bay Press.
  • Collected Verse, Hawthorn Press, 1969.
  • An Open Go, Hawthorn Press, 1971.
  • The Poet in Australia, Hawthorn Press, 1975.
  • Dark Cottage (poems), Freshwater Bay Press, 1984.

Political writing edit

  • Black Australians: A Survey of Native Policy in Western Australia, 1829–1897, Melbourne University Press (Melbourne), 1942, 2nd edition, 1970.
  • Workshop of Security, F. W. Cheshire, 1948.
  • The Government and the People, Australian War Memorial, Volume I: 1939–41, 1951, Volume II: 1942–45, 1970.
  • Native Welfare in Australia, P. Brokensha, 1953.
  • A Time for Building: Australian Administration in Papua-New Guinea, 1951–1963, Melbourne University Press, 1976.
  • The Office of Governor-General, (PDF) Melbourne University Press, 1979.
  • Sir Robert Menzies, Melbourne University Press, 1980.
  • Diplomatic Witness: Australian Foreign Affairs, Melbourne University Press, 1980.
  • Shades of Darkness: Aboriginal Affairs, 1925–1965, Melbourne University Press, 1988.
  • The Chance of Politics, edited by Nicholas Hasluck, Text Pub. (Melbourne), 1997

Biographical edit

  • Mucking About: An Autobiography, Melbourne University Press, 1977, published with a new foreword, University of Western Australia (Nedlands, Australia), 1994.
  • Light That Time Has Made, National Library of Australia (Canberra), 1995.

Critical studies and reviews edit

  • Ryan, Peter (December 1995). "The clear voice of hope". Books. Quadrant. 39 (12): 77. Review of Light that time has made.
  • Peter Ryan, Brief Lives, Duffy & Snellgrove, Sydney, 2004, "Paul Hasluck", pp. 91–104.

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b c Allbrook, Malcolm (2017). "Hasluck, Sir Paul Meernaa (1905–1993)". Australian Dictionary of Biography.
  2. ^ Porter 1993, p. 5.
  3. ^ Porter 1993, p. 6.
  4. ^ Porter 1993, p. 7.
  5. ^ a b Porter 1993, p. 9.
  6. ^ a b Porter 1993, p. 8.
  7. ^ Porter 1993, p. 10.
  8. ^ Freshwater Bay Press
  9. ^ a b "Pukka sahibs of Moresby" Sydney Morning Herald – 18 July 1976
  10. ^ McGregor, Russell (December 2005). "Avoiding "Aborigines": Paul Hasluck and the Northern Territory Welfare Ordinance, 1953 [Abstract]". Australian Journal of Politics and History. Wiley. 51 (4): 513–529. doi:10.1111/j.1467-8497.2005.00391.x. ISSN 0004-9522.
  11. ^ "Appendix 7: Northern Territory". Bringing them Home: Report of the National Inquiry into the Separation of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Children from Their Families. April 1997. Retrieved 2 December 2020 – via Australian Human Rights Commission.
  12. ^ Gavin Souter, Acts of Parliament, 1988, p. 479
  13. ^ "Parliamentary Speech", Professor Ken Inglis, Papers on Parliament No. 28, November 1996
  14. ^ 'How one strong woman changed the course of Australian history, The Age, 2 January 2010
  15. ^ Gavin Souter, Acts of Parliament, p. 523
  16. ^ "Paul Meernaa Caedwalla Hasluck | 1 Apr 1905 – 9 Jan 1993 | Karrakatta Cemetery | Grave Site | BillionGraves". BillionGraves. Retrieved 28 September 2018.
  17. ^ "Search Results". www2.mcb.wa.gov.au. Retrieved 28 September 2018.
  18. ^ "How one strong woman changed the course of Australian history", Bob Wurth, Sydney Morning Herald, 2 January 2010
  19. ^ Badraie 5 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine

Further reading edit

 
St Georges Terrace, Perth bronze tablet
  • Hasluck, Paul (1942), Black Australians, Melbourne University Press.
  • Hasluck, Paul (1988), Shades of Darkness: Aboriginal Affairs 1925–1965, Melbourne University Press.
  • Hasluck, Paul (1994), Mucking About: An Autobiography, University of Western Australia Press.
  • Hasluck, Paul (1997), The Chance of Politics (edited by Nicholas Hasluck), Text Publishing.
  • "Three Governors-General: Hasluck, Kerr, Cowen" in Donald Markwell (2016), Constitutional Conventions and the Headship of State: Australian Experience, Connor Court. ISBN 9781925501155
  • Porter, Robert (1993), Paul Hasluck: A Political Biography, University of Western Australia Press. ISBN 1-875560-20-3

External links edit

  • Paul Hasluck's Australian theatre credits at AusStage
Diplomatic posts
Preceded byas Head of Delegation Permanent Representative of Australia to the United Nations
1946–1947
Succeeded by
Parliament of Australia
New division Member for Curtin
1949–1969
Succeeded by
Political offices
Preceded by Minister for Territories
1951–1963
Succeeded by
Preceded by Minister for Defence
1963–1964
Succeeded by
Preceded by Foreign Minister
1964–1969
Succeeded by
Government offices
Preceded by Governor-General of Australia
1969–1974
Succeeded by

paul, hasluck, anglo, australian, writer, editor, paul, nooncree, hasluck, paul, meernaa, caedwalla, hasluck, gcmg, gcvo, april, 1905, january, 1993, australian, statesman, served, 17th, governor, general, australia, office, from, 1969, 1974, prior, that, libe. For the Anglo Australian writer and editor see Paul Nooncree Hasluck Sir Paul Meernaa Caedwalla Hasluck KG GCMG GCVO PC 1 April 1905 9 January 1993 was an Australian statesman who served as the 17th Governor General of Australia in office from 1969 to 1974 Prior to that he was a Liberal Party politician holding ministerial office continuously from 1951 to 1969 The Right HonourableSir Paul HasluckKG GCMG GCVO PCHasluck in 196017th Governor General of AustraliaIn office 30 April 1969 11 July 1974MonarchElizabeth IIPrime MinisterJohn GortonWilliam McMahonGough WhitlamPreceded byThe Lord CaseySucceeded bySir John KerrMinister for External AffairsIn office 24 April 1964 11 February 1969Prime MinisterRobert MenziesHarold HoltJohn McEwenJohn GortonPreceded byGarfield BarwickSucceeded byGordon FreethMinister for DefenceIn office 18 December 1963 24 April 1964Prime MinisterRobert MenziesPreceded byAthol TownleySucceeded byShane PaltridgeMinister for TerritoriesIn office 11 May 1951 18 December 1963Prime MinisterRobert MenziesPreceded byRichard CaseySucceeded byCharles BarnesMember of the Australian Parliament for CurtinIn office 11 December 1949 12 February 1969Preceded byDivision createdSucceeded byVictor GarlandPersonal detailsBornPaul Meernaa Caedwalla Hasluck 1905 04 01 1 April 1905Fremantle Western Australia AustraliaDied9 January 1993 1993 01 09 aged 87 Dalkeith Western Australia AustraliaResting placeKarrakatta CemeteryPolitical partyLiberal Party of AustraliaSpouseAlexandra Darker m 1932 wbr Hasluck was born in Fremantle Western Australia and attended Perth Modern School and the University of Western Australia After graduation he joined the university as a faculty member eventually becoming a reader in history Hasluck joined the Department of External Affairs during World War II and served as Australia s first Permanent Representative to the United Nations from 1946 to 1947 He would later contribute two volumes to Australia in the War of 1939 1945 the official history of Australia s involvement in the war In 1949 Hasluck was elected to federal parliament for the Liberal Party winning the Division of Curtin In 1951 less than two years after entering politics he was made Minister for Territories in the Menzies Government In his twelve years in the position he initiated transitions toward self government in Australia s territories including Nauru Papua New Guinea and the Northern Territory Hasluck later served as Minister for Defence 1963 1964 and Minister for External Affairs 1964 1969 His tenure in those positions covered Australia s involvement in the Indonesia Malaysia confrontation and the first years of the Vietnam War After the disappearance of Harold Holt Hasluck unsuccessfully stood in the resulting Liberal leadership election He initially stayed on in cabinet under the new prime minister John Gorton but in 1969 Gorton instead nominated him to replace Lord Casey as governor general In his five years in the position Hasluck saw two previous political adversaries William McMahon and Gough Whitlam become prime minister he maintained good working relationships with both In retirement he was a prolific author publishing an autobiography several volumes of poetry and multiple works on Australian history Contents 1 Early life 2 Journalism and academia 3 Political career 3 1 Leadership candidate 4 Governor General 5 Retirement and legacy 6 Honours 7 Coat of Arms 8 Bibliography 8 1 Poetry 8 2 Political writing 8 3 Biographical 8 4 Critical studies and reviews 9 Notes 10 Further reading 11 External linksEarly life editHasluck was born on 1 April 1905 in Fremantle Western Australia one of five children born to Patience Eliza nee Wooler and E thel Meernaa Caedwalla Hasluck 1 His father was born in England and arrived in Australia in 1876 as a small child 2 He obtained a position in the colonial postal service and was postmaster in Coolgardie and on the Great Southern Railway but later resigned to work full time for the Salvation Army His mother was born in England and came to Western Australia to work as a domestic servant also becoming a devout Salvationist where she met her future husband 3 Hasluck grew up in relative poverty with the family often in financial distress as his parents undertook full time missionary work 4 He had a strict religious upbringing in line with the beliefs and tenets of the Salvation Army but became estranged from the movement at a young age 5 As a small child Hasluck spent periods in North Fremantle and in locations around regional Western Australia including York Kalgoorlie and Collie The family lived in Collie for four years where Hasluck s father ran a boys home for child migrants before moving back to Perth in 1916 where he ran the Aged Men s Retreat at Guildford 6 After a brief period at the Guildford State School Hasluck won a scholarship to Perth Modern School which he attended between 1918 and 1922 He was president of the school debating society but later recalled that he lacked in confidence and did not consider going on to further studies He would eventually enrol in the University of Western Australia six years after leaving school 6 completing a diploma in journalism on a part time basis in 1932 and graduating Bachelor of Arts in 1937 1 Journalism and academia editIn 1922 after leaving school Hasluck joined the staff of The West Australian as a probationary cadet 5 He was offered a full time position in 1925 and covered a wide range of areas including court and police reporting sporting events finance and drama and politics He was eventually placed in charge of the newspaper s press gallery staff at Parliament House and wrote a weekly political column covering state politics He cultivated a close relationship with the Perth Trades Hall and the union movement developing a friendship with Westralian Worker editor and future prime minister John Curtin 7 While at The West Australian Hasulck also began to publish articles in that journal and elsewhere on the history of the state After he had obtained his MA he worked as a tutor in the UWA s history department and in 1939 he was promoted to a lectureship in history By that time he had been married for seven years to Alexandra Darker 1908 1993 with whom he had two sons Alexandra Hasluck became a distinguished writer and historian in her own right and was the first woman to be appointed a Dame of the Order of Australia 1 Also in 1939 Hasluck established Freshwater Bay Press 8 through which he released his first book Into the Desert The advent of the Second World War however saw the publishing company go into hiatus The Freshwater Bay Press was later revived by his son Nicholas and among its subsequent publications it issued a second book of Paul Hasluck s poetry Dark Cottage in 1984 In 1941 Hasluck was recruited to the staff of the Department of External Affairs it acquired the name Foreign Affairs only in 1970 and served on Australian delegations to several international conferences including the San Francisco Conference which founded the United Nations Here he came into close contact with the Minister for External Affairs in the Labor government Dr H V Evatt towards whom he conceived a permanent aversion fully reciprocated by Evatt s attitude to him After the war Hasluck returned to the University of Western Australia as a Reader in History and was commissioned to write two volumes of Australia in the War of 1939 1945 a 22 volume official history of Australia s involvement in World War II These volumes were published as The Government and the People 1939 1941 in 1951 and The Government and the People 1941 1945 in 1970 This work was interrupted by his decision to enter politics a decision motivated partly by his disapproval of Evatt s foreign policy Political career edit nbsp Hasluck in 1953At the 1949 election Hasluck won Liberal preselection for the newly created Perth area seat of Curtin Although it was notionally a Labor seat it was located in natural Liberal territory in Perth s wealthy beachside suburbs and Hasluck won it with a resounding swing of almost 14 percent as part of the Coalition s large victory that year In 1951 Prime Minister Robert Menzies appointed Hasluck as Minister for Territories a post that he held for twelve years It gave him responsibility for Australia s colonial possession Papua New Guinea and also the Northern Territory home to Australia s largest population of Aboriginals Although he shared the paternalistic views of the period about the treatment of the Papua New Guineans and followed an assimilationist policy for Aboriginals he carried out significant reforms in how both peoples were treated 9 Hasluck was responsible for the drafting of the bill that became the Welfare Ordinance 1953 which superseded the previous legislation controlling the lives of Aboriginals in the Northern Territory the Aboriginals Ordinance 1918 There was no explicit reference to race in the Welfare Ordinance but it made Aboriginals wards of the state Wards were defined as those who did not have the right to vote which only applied to Aboriginals 10 11 Michael Somare who became Papua New Guinea s first Prime Minister said that his country had been able to enter self government without fear of having to argue with an Ian Smith simply because of Paul Hasluck 9 Hasluck was briefly Minister for Defence in 1963 and 1964 and then became Minister for External Affairs He held the office during the height of Australia s commitment to the Vietnam War of which he was a passionate supporter He worked to strengthen Australia s relationship with the United States and with anticommunist governments in South East Asia and opposed Australian recognition of the People s Republic of China Leadership candidate edit Main article Liberal Party of Australia leadership election 1968 When Prime Minister Harold Holt disappeared in December 1967 and was presumed to have drowned Hasluck was determined that Treasurer William McMahon of whom he had a very low opinion should not become prime minister Although he had no great ambitions for himself Hasluck put his name forward mainly to provide an alternative to McMahon In the event McMahon did not stand as the interim prime minister John McEwen had advised his Country Party would not serve in any government headed by McMahon The choice was between Hasluck John Gorton Billy Snedden and Les Bury but the last two were never considered serious contenders 12 Many Liberal MPs saw Hasluck as too old at 64 too conservative and insufficiently telegenic to compete with the Labor leader Gough Whitlam Accordingly they chose the younger and more aggressive Gorton Governor General edit nbsp Hasluck with Prime Minister William McMahon on 22 March 1971 The two were never closeIn early 1969 Gorton offered Hasluck the post of Governor General which he accepted Reportedly Gorton was uncomfortable having a potential leadership rival in Cabinet Hasluck resigned from Parliament on 10 February 1969 being the first Western Australian member of the House of Representatives to resign He was sworn in as Governor General on 30 April 1969 That may have cost Hasluck a second opportunity to become Prime Minister Gorton was forced to resign in 1971 and the Liberals might well have turned to Hasluck instead of McMahon if he had still been available At the 1972 election Whitlam defeated McMahon and became Prime Minister That created a potentially awkward situation since Whitlam and Hasluck had bitterly resented one another for years In a celebrated incident in the House of Representatives in 1965 Whitlam had thrown a glass of water at Hasluck after Hasluck had said You are one of the filthiest objects ever to come into this chamber 13 Improbably enough in view Hasluck and Whitlam treated each other with complete civility which soon became genuine mutual respect They had no difficulties in their formal dealings An indication of the change that had taken place occurred soon after Whitlam s victory Normal practice called for McMahon to stay on as caretaker Prime Minister until Labor could choose a full ministry at its first caucus meeting However Whitlam was unwilling to wait that long and asked Hasluck to have Whitlam and his deputy leader Lance Barnard sworn in as an interim two man government once Labor s victory was beyond doubt Hasluck promptly agreed and Whitlam and Barnard held 27 portfolios between them until the full Labor ministry was sworn in nbsp Sir Paul and Lady Hasluck with Queen Juliana of the Netherlands right In 1973 Hasluck s Official Secretary Sir Murray Tyrrell retired after a career during which he had served six governors general over 26 years He was succeeded by David Smith Hasluck granted Whitlam a double dissolution in April 1974 with an election on 18 May when the Liberal Opposition threatened to block the Budget bills in the Senate Hasluck s term as Governor General was due to expire in July 1974 Whitlam had offered to extend his term but Hasluck declined citing his wife s refusal to remain at Yarralumla longer than the originally agreed five years 14 Hasluck s last official act as Governor General was to open the 29th Parliament on 9 July 1974 Two days later his successor Sir John Kerr was sworn in 15 Retirement and legacy editHasluck retired to Perth where he remained active in cultural and political affairs until his death in 1993 He was buried at Karrakatta Cemetery 16 17 Historians of the period are certain that if Hasluck had still been Governor General in 1975 the constitutional crisis of that year would have ended differently Hasluck himself implied this in his 1979 book The Office of Governor General and also in the Queale Lecture He was even more explicit in his 1985 interview with Clyde Cameron for the National Library of Australia s Oral History series which was not released until 2010 He said he doubted he would have discussed with anyone but Whitlam about the Senate s 1975 refusal to approve Supply He also argued that Kerr erred in taking advice from Malcolm Fraser prior to appointing him as prime minister In Hasluck s view the function of the governor general is not to be the honest broker in political situations 18 After Hasluck s death his son Nicholas Hasluck published a selection of his father s private journals and notebooks under the title The Chance of Politics This book contained a number of highly critical comments both political and personal about many of Paul Hasluck s contemporaries The publication of this material caused considerable offence to some people Others saw the comments as useful historical information Set into the footpath along St Georges Terrace Perth are 150 bronze tablets commemorating notable figures in Western Australia s history completed as part of WAY 1979 One of the tablets is devoted to Hasluck His heraldic banner as Knight Companion of the Garter from St George s Chapel Windsor Castle probably the only one in Australia was hung in the south transept of St George s Cathedral Perth in 1995 The Catherine wheels on the banner were taken from the Armorial Bearings granted to him by the College of Arms The crest beneath the banner includes the seven pointed Australian Commonwealth Star and a formalised representation of West Australian Xanthorrhoea Honours editHasluck was appointed a Privy Counsellor in 1966 On 21 February 1969 as Governor General designate he was appointed a Knight Grand Cross of the Order of St Michael and St George GCMG During his term as Governor General on 29 May 1970 Queen Elizabeth II appointed him a Knight Grand Cross of the Royal Victorian Order GCVO an appointment within her personal gift Hasluck received the Commemorative Medal of the 2500th Anniversary of the founding of the Persian Empire on 14 October 1971 19 On 24 April 1979 he was made a Knight Companion of the Order of the Garter KG The Federal Division of Hasluck is named jointly after Sir Paul and his wife Dame Alexandra Hasluck Coat of Arms editCoat of arms of Sir Paul Hasluck KG GCMG GCVO nbsp Crest In front of a mullet of seven points Or a Xanthorrhea plant in bloom proper Escutcheon Per pale and per chevron Or and Azure three Catherine wheels within a border counterchanged Supporters Dexter a pelican proper Sinister a cormorant proper Motto PERFER ET OBDURA Orders Order of the Garter Order of St Michael and St George Royal Victorian OrderBibliography editThis list is incomplete you can help by adding missing items July 2016 Poetry edit Hasluck Paul 1939 Into the desert Claremont W A Freshwater Bay Press Collected Verse Hawthorn Press 1969 An Open Go Hawthorn Press 1971 The Poet in Australia Hawthorn Press 1975 Dark Cottage poems Freshwater Bay Press 1984 Political writing edit Black Australians A Survey of Native Policy in Western Australia 1829 1897 Melbourne University Press Melbourne 1942 2nd edition 1970 Workshop of Security F W Cheshire 1948 The Government and the People Australian War Memorial Volume I 1939 41 1951 Volume II 1942 45 1970 Native Welfare in Australia P Brokensha 1953 A Time for Building Australian Administration in Papua New Guinea 1951 1963 Melbourne University Press 1976 The Office of Governor General PDF Melbourne University Press 1979 Sir Robert Menzies Melbourne University Press 1980 Diplomatic Witness Australian Foreign Affairs Melbourne University Press 1980 Shades of Darkness Aboriginal Affairs 1925 1965 Melbourne University Press 1988 The Chance of Politics edited by Nicholas Hasluck Text Pub Melbourne 1997Biographical edit Mucking About An Autobiography Melbourne University Press 1977 published with a new foreword University of Western Australia Nedlands Australia 1994 Light That Time Has Made National Library of Australia Canberra 1995 Critical studies and reviews edit Ryan Peter December 1995 The clear voice of hope Books Quadrant 39 12 77 Review of Light that time has made Peter Ryan Brief Lives Duffy amp Snellgrove Sydney 2004 Paul Hasluck pp 91 104 Notes edit a b c Allbrook Malcolm 2017 Hasluck Sir Paul Meernaa 1905 1993 Australian Dictionary of Biography Porter 1993 p 5 sfn error no target CITEREFPorter1993 help Porter 1993 p 6 sfn error no target CITEREFPorter1993 help Porter 1993 p 7 sfn error no target CITEREFPorter1993 help a b Porter 1993 p 9 sfn error no target CITEREFPorter1993 help a b Porter 1993 p 8 sfn error no target CITEREFPorter1993 help Porter 1993 p 10 sfn error no target CITEREFPorter1993 help Freshwater Bay Press a b Pukka sahibs of Moresby Sydney Morning Herald 18 July 1976 McGregor Russell December 2005 Avoiding Aborigines Paul Hasluck and the Northern Territory Welfare Ordinance 1953 Abstract Australian Journal of Politics and History Wiley 51 4 513 529 doi 10 1111 j 1467 8497 2005 00391 x ISSN 0004 9522 Appendix 7 Northern Territory Bringing them Home Report of the National Inquiry into the Separation of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Children from Their Families April 1997 Retrieved 2 December 2020 via Australian Human Rights Commission Gavin Souter Acts of Parliament 1988 p 479 Parliamentary Speech Professor Ken Inglis Papers on Parliament No 28 November 1996 How one strong woman changed the course of Australian history The Age 2 January 2010 Gavin Souter Acts of Parliament p 523 Paul Meernaa Caedwalla Hasluck 1 Apr 1905 9 Jan 1993 Karrakatta Cemetery Grave Site BillionGraves BillionGraves Retrieved 28 September 2018 Search Results www2 mcb wa gov au Retrieved 28 September 2018 How one strong woman changed the course of Australian history Bob Wurth Sydney Morning Herald 2 January 2010 Badraie Archived 5 March 2016 at the Wayback MachineFurther reading edit nbsp St Georges Terrace Perth bronze tabletHasluck Paul 1942 Black Australians Melbourne University Press Hasluck Paul 1988 Shades of Darkness Aboriginal Affairs 1925 1965 Melbourne University Press Hasluck Paul 1994 Mucking About An Autobiography University of Western Australia Press Hasluck Paul 1997 The Chance of Politics edited by Nicholas Hasluck Text Publishing Three Governors General Hasluck Kerr Cowen in Donald Markwell 2016 Constitutional Conventions and the Headship of State Australian Experience Connor Court ISBN 9781925501155 Porter Robert 1993 Paul Hasluck A Political Biography University of Western Australia Press ISBN 1 875560 20 3External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Paul Hasluck Paul Hasluck s Australian theatre credits at AusStageDiplomatic postsPreceded byNorman Makinas Head of Delegation Permanent Representative of Australia to the United Nations1946 1947 Succeeded byJohn HoodParliament of AustraliaNew division Member for Curtin1949 1969 Succeeded byVictor GarlandPolitical officesPreceded byRichard Casey Minister for Territories1951 1963 Succeeded byCharles BarnesPreceded byAthol Townley Minister for Defence1963 1964 Succeeded byShane PaltridgePreceded byGarfield Barwick Foreign Minister1964 1969 Succeeded byGordon FreethGovernment officesPreceded byLord Casey Governor General of Australia1969 1974 Succeeded bySir John Kerr Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Paul Hasluck amp oldid 1194444131, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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