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Ted Theodore

Edward Granville Theodore (29 December 1884 – 9 February 1950) was an Australian politician who served as Premier of Queensland from 1919 to 1925, as leader of the state Labor Party. He later entered federal politics, serving as Treasurer in the Scullin Labor government.

Ted Theodore
Treasurer of Australia
In office
29 January 1931 – 6 January 1932
Prime MinisterJames Scullin
Preceded byJames Scullin
Succeeded byJoseph Lyons
In office
22 October 1929 – 9 June 1930
Prime MinisterJames Scullin
Preceded byEarle Page
Succeeded byJames Scullin
Deputy Leader of the Labor Party
In office
5 February 1929 – 19 December 1931
LeaderJames Scullin
Preceded byArthur Blakeley
Succeeded byFrank Forde
Member of Parliament
for Dalley
In office
26 February 1927 – 19 December 1931
Preceded byWilliam Mahony
Succeeded bySol Rosevear
20th Premier of Queensland
Elections: 1920, 1923
In office
22 October 1919 – 26 February 1925
MonarchGeorge V
DeputyJohn Fihelly
William Gillies
GovernorHamilton Goold-Adams
Matthew Nathan
Preceded byT. J. Ryan
Succeeded byWilliam Gillies
4th Deputy Premier of Queensland
In office
1 June 1915 – 22 October 1919
PremierT. J. Ryan
Preceded byThomas O'Sullivan
Succeeded byJohn Fihelly
State cabinet posts
Chief Secretary
In office
22 October 1919 – 26 February 1925
Preceded byT. J. Ryan
Succeeded byWilliam Gillies
24th Treasurer of Queensland
In office
8 February 1922 – 26 February 1925
Preceded byJohn Fihelly
Succeeded byWilliam Gillies
In office
22 October 1919 – 9 March 1920
Preceded byHimself
Succeeded byJohn Fihelly
In office
1 June 1915 – 22 October 1919
PremierT. J. Ryan
Preceded byWalter Barnes
Succeeded byHimself
Secretary for Public Works
In office
8 February 1922 – 6 October 1922
Preceded byJohn Fihelly
Succeeded byWilliam Forgan Smith
In office
1 June 1915 – 22 October 1919
PremierT. J. Ryan
Preceded byT. J. Ryan
Succeeded byWalter Barnes
State party positions
Leader of the Labor Party in Queensland
In office
22 October 1919 – 24 February 1925
DeputyJohn Fihelly
William Gillies
Preceded byT. J. Ryan
Succeeded byWilliam Gillies
Deputy Leader of the Labor Party in Queensland
In office
7 September 1912 – 22 October 1919
Preceded byT. J. Ryan
Succeeded byJohn Fihelly
State electorates
Member of the Legislative Assembly
for Woothakata
In office
27 April 1912 – 22 September 1925
Preceded byNew seat
Succeeded byJohn O'Keefe
Member of the Legislative Assembly
for Chillagoe
In office
2 October 1909 – 27 April 1912
Preceded byMichael Woods
Succeeded bySeat abolished
Personal details
Born
Edward Granville Theodore[a]

(1884-12-29)29 December 1884
Port Adelaide, Province of South Australia, British Empire
Died9 February 1950(1950-02-09) (aged 65)
Edgecliff, New South Wales, Australia
Resting placeSouth Head Cemetery, Bronte
Political partyLabor
Spouse
Esther Mahoney
(m. 1909)
RelationsStephen (brother)
Children4

Theodore was born in Adelaide, the son of a Romanian immigrant. He left school at the age of 12, and spent the next decade working his way around the country. He arrived in Queensland in 1906, and soon became involved in the labour movement. Theodore was elected to the Queensland Legislative Assembly in 1909, aged just 24. He was also elected state president of the Australian Workers' Union in 1913. Theodore became Treasurer of Queensland following Labor's victory at the 1915 state election.

In 1919, Theodore succeeded T. J. Ryan as premier. His government pursued various interventionist economic policies, establishing a number of state-run enterprises and introducing new competition and labour market regulations. These perceived steps towards socialism led to Theodore being nicknamed "Red Ted". A notable constitutional reform was the abolition of the Queensland Legislative Council in 1922; Queensland remains the only Australian state with no upper house in its parliament. Theodore was popular among the general public, and won two state elections (1920 and 1923) before resigning in 1925 to enter federal politics. He was defeated at his first attempt, but two years later won a by-election for a seat in Sydney.

In 1929, Theodore was elected deputy leader to James Scullin. He became Treasurer and de facto Deputy Prime Minister after the 1929 election, but resigned after less than a year amid accusations of corruption. Theodore returned as a Treasurer in early 1931, and served until the government's landslide defeat at the 1931 election, where he lost his own seat. He had little success in combating the Great Depression, and disputes over economic policy led to a party split and several defections to Lang Labor and the United Australia Party. Theodore was only 47 when he left politics, and went on to have a successful business career as a partner of Frank Packer.

Early life edit

Theodore was born on 29 December 1884 in Port Adelaide, South Australia, the second of six children born to Annie (née Tanner) and Basil Stephen Theodore.[1] His parents had met in 1882, on the passage from England to Australia. After arriving in Fremantle, Western Australia, they initially went their separate ways; they kept in touch by letter, however, and by the end of the year had married in Perth. They subsequently moved to Adelaide, where their first son Stephen was born the following year.[2]

Theodore's father, originally named Vasile Teodorescu, was born in Galați, Romania, into a well-to-do family connected with the Romanian nobility. He and his brother travelled to London in their youth, where they learned English. His parents had intended that he follow his father into the Romanian Orthodox priesthood, but he quit divinity school to join the British Merchant Navy.[1] Theodore's mother was born in Manchester, England, and descended from Irish immigrants. Her father died when she was an infant, and she was sent to work in the Lancashire cotton mills. When her mother died, she accepted an invitation to join her step-brother Tom Harrison (an ex-convict) at his farm in Greenough, Western Australia; however, she stayed there only a few months before returning to Perth to marry.[2]

Theodore was educated at Lefevre Peninsula Catholic and Aldgate State schools in Adelaide, but left school at 12 to work on the Adelaide docks. In 1900, aged 16, he left for the goldfields of Western Australia, working as a labourer at Lennonville and Peak Hill. He then joined a guano mining crew on the Houtman Abrolhos, where he acquired his lifelong love of fishing.[3] After a while, Theodore returned to the mainland and worked as a gold miner at Day Dawn and Kalgoorlie. He went back to Adelaide for Christmas 1902, and then joined his father on an unsuccessful prospecting expedition to Leigh Creek and Bundaleer, where they had hoped to find copper. Later in 1903, Theodore got his first experience in industrial relations, helping negotiate a wage increase for miners at Arltunga.[4] He then decided to try his luck at Broken Hill, New South Wales. In 1906 he left for Cairns, Queensland where he prospected for tin in the Chillagoe area and worked in the Vulcan Mine in Irvinebank. It was among the unorganised workers of Stannary Hills and Irvinebank that the Amalgamated Workers' Association of North Queensland was born.[citation needed]

State politics edit

Theodore founded the Amalgamated Workers' Association with Bill McCormack. This union used the process and principle of amalgamation to unify with other unions until it became Australia's largest union, the Australian Workers' Union (AWU). Theodore became Queensland state president of the AWU in 1913. Meanwhile, he had been elected to the Legislative Assembly of Queensland in Woothakata from 1909 to 1912 for the Australian Labor Party and subsequently from 1912 to 1925 in Chillagoe (the seat of Woothakata renamed).[5][6] His position in the AWU made him a power in the Parliamentary Labor Party, and when Labor won a majority in the Assembly for the first time in 1915, he became Treasurer and Secretary for Public Works in the government of T. J. Ryan.[7]

Premier of Queensland edit

In 1919, Ryan resigned and Theodore succeeded him as Premier of Queensland, then Australia's only Labor state government, following the great split in the Labor Party over the issue of conscription in World War I. He was a popular and successful Premier, and soon began to be talked about as a possible federal Labor leader. Important educational measures were implemented, which benefited the handicapped and isolated, adult franchise in local government was introduced, and the upper house of Parliament abolished. Workers benefited from the introduction of a compulsory unemployment scheme, changes in the Safety and Accommodation Acts, and the Profiteering Prevention Act. Improvements in housing were also secured through amendments to the Savings Bank Act, the Workers' Homes Act, and the Fair Rents Act. Agriculture also received much attention through measures like the Agricultural Education Act, the Irrigation Act, the Main Roads Act, and the establishment of an Agricultural Bank, a cold store, a state cannery, a Cheese Pool, and a wheat board. Orderly marketing and controls on price fluctuations were also carried out to develop agriculture, while the Theodore Government also involved itself in the marketing of Queensland fruit produce.[8][page needed]

In 1925, Theodore resigned as Premier and stood for the Queensland seat of Herbert in the federal election, but was unexpectedly defeated by Lewis Nott by 268 votes.[9]

Federal politics edit

 
Theodore as a federal MP in the 1920s

Theodore was elected to the House of Representatives for the seat of Dalley in Sydney at a 1927 by-election. His status as an outsider in Sydney Labor politics was a permanent problem for him, but he soon made his mark in federal Parliament. In 1929 he became Deputy Leader of the Labor Party and Deputy Opposition Leader under James Scullin. In October 1929 Scullin defeated the conservative government of Stanley Bruce and became Prime Minister, while Theodore became Treasurer and de facto Deputy Prime Minister.[citation needed]

Two days after the Scullin government was sworn in, the US stock market crashed. The effects of the Great Depression were soon felt in Australia, and the Scullin government, like others, was hard pressed to deal with mounting unemployment and the collapse of world trade, on which Australia's export-based economy depended. Theodore, an early advocate of Keynesian economics, favoured deficit spending to rejuvenate the economy. However, Works and Railways Minister Joseph Lyons and Trade Minister James Fenton supported a more traditional, deflationary approach.[citation needed]

Meanwhile, a conservative government had taken power in Queensland, and appointed a Royal Commission to investigate Theodore's financial dealings as Premier. The Commission found that Theodore and another former Queensland Premier William McCormack, had corruptly profited by authorising the purchase by the state of a copper mine at Mungana while concealing the fact that they had a financial interest in the mine, which furthermore was not economically viable. In July 1930 the "Mungana affair" forced Theodore's resignation.[10][11]

Without Theodore's leadership and financial skills, the Scullin government drifted into deeper crisis. When it became apparent that the Queensland government did not intend charging Theodore with any offence, Scullin re-appointed him as Treasurer, in January 1931. Lyons and Fenton felt that Scullin should have waited until Theodore had been formally cleared, and resigned from cabinet in protest. Two months later, they and three of their supporters crossed the floor to the non-Labor opposition, and eventually joined forces with the Nationalists to form the United Australia Party, led by Lyons.[citation needed]

The Depression edit

 
Theodore with Prime Minister James Scullin in December 1929

During 1931 Theodore faced the greatest economic crisis in Australian history. The government imported an advisor from the Bank of England, Dr Otto Niemeyer, who recommended an "orthodox" solution, including sharp reductions in government spending such as pensions and unemployment benefits. The radical Premier of New South Wales, Jack Lang, on the other hand, campaigned for the repudiation of Australia's debt to bond-holders in London.[citation needed]

Theodore rejected both these alternatives and proposed instead an expansion of credit to farmers and small business, through the issue of "fiduciary notes" which could be redeemed after the Depression. His Fiduciary Notes Bill was denounced as financially unsound by orthodox economists and the banks. It was eventually defeated in the Senate, which was still controlled by the conservative opposition. Theodore has been described as a visionary proto-Keynesian for this proposal, although it cannot be known what effect his measures would have had on the Depression had the bill been passed.[citation needed]

In March 1931, Lang's supporters in Parliament deserted the main body of Labor. Combined with the defection of Lyons and his supporters a few weeks earlier, this cost Scullin his majority. In November, the UAP and Langites rose to defeat the government on a non-confidence motion, and an election was held in December. Theodore had no base of support in Sydney and he lost his seat to Lang candidate Sol Rosevear. This ended Theodore's political career, although during the 1930s several offers were made to him to return.[citation needed]

He was the only sitting treasurer to lose his seat until Josh Frydenberg in 2022.[citation needed]

Later life edit

 
Theodore (1945), by William Pidgeon

Newspaper industry edit

Theodore left politics entirely after his defeat.[12] In 1932, Theodore began a business relationship with 25-year-old Frank Packer, the son of newspaper industry veteran R. C. Packer. The duo formed Sydney Newspapers Limited with the aim of acquiring The World, a daily newspaper published by the Australian Workers' Union that was known to be in financial difficulties. For £100, they acquired the rights to lease the masthead and plant for one year. It was subsequently announced that the newspaper would be re-branded as The Star and would be priced at 1d (one penny), compared with 1½d for its major rival The Sun, published by Associated Newspapers Limited. Hugh Denison, the managing director of Associated Newspapers, paid Theodore and Packer £86,500 in return for an agreement for them not to publish a daily or Sunday newspaper for three years.[13][page needed]

Theodore invested most of his profits back into Associated Newspapers, buying shares at a low price and selling them later for a 500–600% return.[14] He and Frank Packer subsequently decided to create a new weekly magazine for women, which they titled The Australian Women's Weekly. George Warnecke, an ALP acquaintance of Theodore's, was appointed as the founding editor. The new publication proved immensely successful, and in 1936 Theodore and Packer joined forces with Denison to form Australian Consolidated Press (ACP), which became the new publisher of the Women's Weekly and Denison's The Daily Telegraph.[13][page needed] Theodore served as chairman of the new company, but "interested himself only in the financial and administrative aspects" while Packer concentrated on publishing.[15]

Fiji edit

In 1933, Theodore learned that gold had been found in Fiji on the island of Viti Levu. The area of interest had been pegged by Bill Borthwick and leased by Pat Costello, both of whom had connections with Queensland. Theodore contacted Costello, an old acquaintance, about the find, and offered to finance further exploration of the area. He formed a syndicate with Frank Packer, John Wren, and Wren's associate Patrick Cody, with each of them holding a quarter stake.[16] Geological findings were initially unfavourable. Eventually three mines were established – Emperor, Loloma and Dolphin – with Theodore as managing director of all three. Their success sparked a minor gold rush, but by the end of 1936 the three mines were the only ones remaining. By 1943 Loloma alone had yielded $10 million worth of gold and paid over $2 million in dividends.[17]

Theodore took a keen interest in the welfare of the miners. He advised the government on the creation of medical benefits and workers' compensation schemes, while the company town had three schools, a golf course, a bowling green, tennis courts, a dispensary and a maternity hospital.[18] Due to his success in Fiji, Theodore was approached by the British administrations in Borneo and the Solomon Islands to lead prospecting expeditions.[18] Neither were successful, and he contracted malaria while in Borneo; upon his return, he was presented with a tabua (polished whale's tooth) and elevated to the chiefly rank of ratu. Theodore took up full-time residence in Fiji, returning to Australia only for business trips and trout-fishing. He had a residence 10 miles (16 km) outside of Suva, and while at the mines lived in a bure.[19]

World War II edit

In March 1939, Prime Minister Joseph Lyons cabled Theodore in Fiji, asking him to return to Australia and co-ordinate the country's national resources for defence purposes. However due to Lyons' defection from Labor being a key contributor to Theodore's political demise, Theodore therefore declined, stating that "in the absence of some emergency involving the national safety, I would like to keep out of politics".[20] In the event however Lyons' offer became moot when he died the following month April before anything could be arranged.[21] In May 1940, the Loan Council offered him the position of coordinator of works. This proved highly controversial among members of the government, and Prime Minister Robert Menzies issued a statement explaining that the offer had been made entirely by the Loan Council and would have to be ratified by cabinet.[22] Theodore eventually agreed in February 1942 to oversee the creation of the Allied Works Council, with himself as Director-General of Allied Works. He subsequently established the Civil Constructional Corps (CCC) to undertake construction work requested by the military.[23]

Theodore faced criticism and political interference from his former opponents in the ALP, particularly Jack Lang and Eddie Ward, the Minister for Labour and National Service. He requested that the Department of Labour and National Service provide the CCC with lists of men available for work, but Ward refused to allow the information to be issued. The corps had to resort to telephone directories and electoral rolls in order to recruit sufficient workers. Ward then attacked Theodore for calling up elderly and deceased men.[24] In September 1942, Theodore tendered his resignation to Curtin, citing Ward's lack of cooperation.[25] Curtin relaxed political controls and gave him additional powers, including the ability to prosecute men who refused to work. He rescinded his resignation and eventually left the position in October 1944.[26]

Final years edit

Theodore was a delegate to the Imperial Press Conference in London in 1946. He resumed his work in Fiji and considered moving there permanently. However, the following year he was diagnosed with a serious heart condition. His health declined rapidly and he began handing business responsibilities to his children; he resigned from ACP in January 1949.[26]

After several days in a coma, Theodore died at his flat in Edgecliff on 9 February 1950, at the age of 65.[27][28] His funeral was held at St Mary's Cathedral, Sydney, with the mass celebrated by his friend James Duhig, Catholic Archbishop of Brisbane.[29] He was buried at South Head Cemetery.[7]

Personal life edit

Theodore married Esther Mahoney on 20 December 1909. She worked as a photographic tinter and was the daughter of a cabinetmaker from Toowoomba.[30] The couple had two sons and two daughters.[7] She was eleven years his senior. The couple were estranged at the time of Theodore's death in 1950.[31] After Ted's death his son John assumed charge of the family's joint business interests with Frank Packer and he became the first managing director of Channel 9.[citation needed]

Assessment edit

The Mungana affair likely cost Theodore a chance to become prime minister, and would "irreparably taint his reputation during his lifetime and beyond". Historian Ross Fitzgerald has called him "the most talented Labor politician never to be prime minister of Australia", and noted that his admirers include Paul Keating, Bob Katter, and Jack Lang (his former opponent).[32]

Named in his honour edit

The following things were named after Theodore:

Notes edit

  1. ^ Anglified-modification of his fathers surname: Teodorescu.

References edit

  1. ^ a b Fitzgerald 1994, p. 1.
  2. ^ a b Fitzgerald 1994, p. 2.
  3. ^ Young 1971, p. 8.
  4. ^ Young 1971, p. 9.
  5. ^ (PDF). Queensland Parliamentary Record 2015–2017: The 55th Parliament. Queensland Parliament. Archived from the original on 26 April 2020. Retrieved 27 April 2020.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  6. ^ "Representatives of Queensland State Electorates 1860–2012" (PDF). Queensland Parliament. (PDF) from the original on 1 April 2015. Retrieved 30 January 2015.
  7. ^ a b c Cain, Neville (1990). "Edward Granville Theodore (1884–1950)". Australian Dictionary of Biography. Vol. 12. National Centre of Biography, Australian National University. ISSN 1833-7538. from the original on 24 October 2019. Retrieved 26 October 2019.
  8. ^ Ross McMullin, The Light on the Hill: The Australian Labor Party 1891–1991
  9. ^ Farquharson, John (2000). "Lewis Windermere Nott (1886–1951)". Australian Dictionary of Biography. Vol. 15. National Centre of Biography, Australian National University. ISSN 1833-7538. from the original on 23 March 2007. Retrieved 18 August 2007.
  10. ^ "Advertising". The Week. Vol. CIX, no. 2, 846. Queensland, Australia. 11 July 1930. p. 1. from the original on 27 May 2022. Retrieved 5 November 2017 – via National Library of Australia.
  11. ^ "Sequel to Mungara Report". Camperdown Chronicle. Vol. LVI, no. 4490. Victoria, Australia. 8 July 1930. p. 5. from the original on 27 May 2022. Retrieved 5 November 2017 – via National Library of Australia.
  12. ^ Young 1971, p. 155–156.
  13. ^ a b Young, Sally (2019). Paper Emperors: The Rise of Australia's Newspaper Empires. NewSouth. ISBN 978-1742244471.
  14. ^ Young 1971, p. 161.
  15. ^ Young 1971, p. 162.
  16. ^ Young 1971, p. 163.
  17. ^ Young 1971, p. 166.
  18. ^ a b Young 1971, p. 167.
  19. ^ Young 1971, p. 168.
  20. ^ Young 1971, p. 170.
  21. ^ "Ted Theodore: the proto-Keynesian | Treasury.gov.au". treasury.gov.au. from the original on 31 October 2023. Retrieved 12 February 2024.
  22. ^ Young 1971, p. 171.
  23. ^ Young 1971, p. 172.
  24. ^ Young 1971, p. 173.
  25. ^ Young 1971, p. 174.
  26. ^ a b Young 1971, p. 175.
  27. ^ Young 1971, p. 176.
  28. ^ "Death Of E. G. Theodore". Telegraph. 9 February 1950. from the original on 11 November 2019. Retrieved 26 October 2019.
  29. ^ "Funeral of Mr. Theodore". The Age. 13 February 1950. from the original on 15 November 2019. Retrieved 26 October 2019.
  30. ^ Young 1971, pp. 18–19.
  31. ^ Fitzgerald, Ross. "E.G. (Red Ted) Theodore 1884–1950". Journal of the Royal Historical Society of Queensland. 15 (8): 362–4. from the original on 9 July 2020. Retrieved 29 January 2021 – via UQ eSpace.
  32. ^ Scandal that stole Red Ted's chance to tackle top job, The Australian, 13 April 2013.
  33. ^ "Theodore – town in Shire of Banana (entry 34200)". Queensland Place Names. Queensland Government. Retrieved 30 October 2017.
  34. ^ Queensland Redistribution Commission (26 May 2017). "Determination of Queensland's Legislative Assembly Electoral Districts" (PDF). Queensland Government Gazette. pp. 169, 173. (PDF) from the original on 29 October 2017. Retrieved 29 October 2017.
  35. ^ "Australia For Everyone: Canberra - The Names of Canberra". australiaforeveryone.com.au. from the original on 13 March 2016. Retrieved 6 March 2018.

Sources edit

Further reading edit

  • Kennedy, Kett (1978). The Mungana Affair: State Mining and Political Corruption in the 1920s (PDF). University of Queensland Press. ISBN 0702210285.
Political offices
Preceded by Premier of Queensland
1919–1925
Succeeded by
Preceded by Treasurer of Australia
1929–1930
Succeeded by
Preceded by Treasurer of Australia
1931–1932
Succeeded by
Parliament of Queensland
Preceded by Member for Woothakata
1909–1912
Succeeded by
Abolished
Preceded by
New Division
Member for Chillagoe
1912–1925
Succeeded by
Parliament of Australia
Preceded by Member for Dalley
1927–1931
Succeeded by
Party political offices
Preceded by Leader of the Labor Party in Queensland
1919–1925
Succeeded by
Preceded by Deputy Leader of the Australian Labor Party
1929–1931
Succeeded by

theodore, edward, granville, theodore, december, 1884, february, 1950, australian, politician, served, premier, queensland, from, 1919, 1925, leader, state, labor, party, later, entered, federal, politics, serving, treasurer, scullin, labor, government, honour. Edward Granville Theodore 29 December 1884 9 February 1950 was an Australian politician who served as Premier of Queensland from 1919 to 1925 as leader of the state Labor Party He later entered federal politics serving as Treasurer in the Scullin Labor government The HonourableTed TheodoreTreasurer of AustraliaIn office 29 January 1931 6 January 1932Prime MinisterJames ScullinPreceded byJames ScullinSucceeded byJoseph LyonsIn office 22 October 1929 9 June 1930Prime MinisterJames ScullinPreceded byEarle PageSucceeded byJames ScullinDeputy Leader of the Labor PartyIn office 5 February 1929 19 December 1931LeaderJames ScullinPreceded byArthur BlakeleySucceeded byFrank FordeMember of Parliament for DalleyIn office 26 February 1927 19 December 1931Preceded byWilliam MahonySucceeded bySol Rosevear20th Premier of Queensland Elections 1920 1923In office 22 October 1919 26 February 1925MonarchGeorge VDeputyJohn Fihelly William GilliesGovernorHamilton Goold Adams Matthew NathanPreceded byT J RyanSucceeded byWilliam Gillies4th Deputy Premier of QueenslandIn office 1 June 1915 22 October 1919PremierT J RyanPreceded byThomas O SullivanSucceeded byJohn FihellyState cabinet postsChief SecretaryIn office 22 October 1919 26 February 1925Preceded byT J RyanSucceeded byWilliam Gillies24th Treasurer of QueenslandIn office 8 February 1922 26 February 1925Preceded byJohn FihellySucceeded byWilliam GilliesIn office 22 October 1919 9 March 1920Preceded byHimselfSucceeded byJohn FihellyIn office 1 June 1915 22 October 1919PremierT J RyanPreceded byWalter BarnesSucceeded byHimselfSecretary for Public WorksIn office 8 February 1922 6 October 1922Preceded byJohn FihellySucceeded byWilliam Forgan SmithIn office 1 June 1915 22 October 1919PremierT J RyanPreceded byT J RyanSucceeded byWalter BarnesState party positionsLeader of the Labor Party in QueenslandIn office 22 October 1919 24 February 1925DeputyJohn Fihelly William GilliesPreceded byT J RyanSucceeded byWilliam GilliesDeputy Leader of the Labor Party in QueenslandIn office 7 September 1912 22 October 1919Preceded byT J RyanSucceeded byJohn FihellyState electoratesMember of the Legislative Assembly for WoothakataIn office 27 April 1912 22 September 1925Preceded byNew seatSucceeded byJohn O KeefeMember of the Legislative Assembly for ChillagoeIn office 2 October 1909 27 April 1912Preceded byMichael WoodsSucceeded bySeat abolishedPersonal detailsBornEdward Granville Theodore a 1884 12 29 29 December 1884Port Adelaide Province of South Australia British EmpireDied9 February 1950 1950 02 09 aged 65 Edgecliff New South Wales AustraliaResting placeSouth Head Cemetery BrontePolitical partyLaborSpouseEsther Mahoney m 1909 wbr RelationsStephen brother Children4 Theodore was born in Adelaide the son of a Romanian immigrant He left school at the age of 12 and spent the next decade working his way around the country He arrived in Queensland in 1906 and soon became involved in the labour movement Theodore was elected to the Queensland Legislative Assembly in 1909 aged just 24 He was also elected state president of the Australian Workers Union in 1913 Theodore became Treasurer of Queensland following Labor s victory at the 1915 state election In 1919 Theodore succeeded T J Ryan as premier His government pursued various interventionist economic policies establishing a number of state run enterprises and introducing new competition and labour market regulations These perceived steps towards socialism led to Theodore being nicknamed Red Ted A notable constitutional reform was the abolition of the Queensland Legislative Council in 1922 Queensland remains the only Australian state with no upper house in its parliament Theodore was popular among the general public and won two state elections 1920 and 1923 before resigning in 1925 to enter federal politics He was defeated at his first attempt but two years later won a by election for a seat in Sydney In 1929 Theodore was elected deputy leader to James Scullin He became Treasurer and de facto Deputy Prime Minister after the 1929 election but resigned after less than a year amid accusations of corruption Theodore returned as a Treasurer in early 1931 and served until the government s landslide defeat at the 1931 election where he lost his own seat He had little success in combating the Great Depression and disputes over economic policy led to a party split and several defections to Lang Labor and the United Australia Party Theodore was only 47 when he left politics and went on to have a successful business career as a partner of Frank Packer Contents 1 Early life 2 State politics 2 1 Premier of Queensland 3 Federal politics 3 1 The Depression 4 Later life 4 1 Newspaper industry 4 2 Fiji 4 3 World War II 4 4 Final years 5 Personal life 6 Assessment 7 Named in his honour 8 Notes 9 References 9 1 Sources 10 Further readingEarly life editTheodore was born on 29 December 1884 in Port Adelaide South Australia the second of six children born to Annie nee Tanner and Basil Stephen Theodore 1 His parents had met in 1882 on the passage from England to Australia After arriving in Fremantle Western Australia they initially went their separate ways they kept in touch by letter however and by the end of the year had married in Perth They subsequently moved to Adelaide where their first son Stephen was born the following year 2 Theodore s father originally named Vasile Teodorescu was born in Galați Romania into a well to do family connected with the Romanian nobility He and his brother travelled to London in their youth where they learned English His parents had intended that he follow his father into the Romanian Orthodox priesthood but he quit divinity school to join the British Merchant Navy 1 Theodore s mother was born in Manchester England and descended from Irish immigrants Her father died when she was an infant and she was sent to work in the Lancashire cotton mills When her mother died she accepted an invitation to join her step brother Tom Harrison an ex convict at his farm in Greenough Western Australia however she stayed there only a few months before returning to Perth to marry 2 Theodore was educated at Lefevre Peninsula Catholic and Aldgate State schools in Adelaide but left school at 12 to work on the Adelaide docks In 1900 aged 16 he left for the goldfields of Western Australia working as a labourer at Lennonville and Peak Hill He then joined a guano mining crew on the Houtman Abrolhos where he acquired his lifelong love of fishing 3 After a while Theodore returned to the mainland and worked as a gold miner at Day Dawn and Kalgoorlie He went back to Adelaide for Christmas 1902 and then joined his father on an unsuccessful prospecting expedition to Leigh Creek and Bundaleer where they had hoped to find copper Later in 1903 Theodore got his first experience in industrial relations helping negotiate a wage increase for miners at Arltunga 4 He then decided to try his luck at Broken Hill New South Wales In 1906 he left for Cairns Queensland where he prospected for tin in the Chillagoe area and worked in the Vulcan Mine in Irvinebank It was among the unorganised workers of Stannary Hills and Irvinebank that the Amalgamated Workers Association of North Queensland was born citation needed State politics editTheodore founded the Amalgamated Workers Association with Bill McCormack This union used the process and principle of amalgamation to unify with other unions until it became Australia s largest union the Australian Workers Union AWU Theodore became Queensland state president of the AWU in 1913 Meanwhile he had been elected to the Legislative Assembly of Queensland in Woothakata from 1909 to 1912 for the Australian Labor Party and subsequently from 1912 to 1925 in Chillagoe the seat of Woothakata renamed 5 6 His position in the AWU made him a power in the Parliamentary Labor Party and when Labor won a majority in the Assembly for the first time in 1915 he became Treasurer and Secretary for Public Works in the government of T J Ryan 7 Premier of Queensland edit In 1919 Ryan resigned and Theodore succeeded him as Premier of Queensland then Australia s only Labor state government following the great split in the Labor Party over the issue of conscription in World War I He was a popular and successful Premier and soon began to be talked about as a possible federal Labor leader Important educational measures were implemented which benefited the handicapped and isolated adult franchise in local government was introduced and the upper house of Parliament abolished Workers benefited from the introduction of a compulsory unemployment scheme changes in the Safety and Accommodation Acts and the Profiteering Prevention Act Improvements in housing were also secured through amendments to the Savings Bank Act the Workers Homes Act and the Fair Rents Act Agriculture also received much attention through measures like the Agricultural Education Act the Irrigation Act the Main Roads Act and the establishment of an Agricultural Bank a cold store a state cannery a Cheese Pool and a wheat board Orderly marketing and controls on price fluctuations were also carried out to develop agriculture while the Theodore Government also involved itself in the marketing of Queensland fruit produce 8 page needed In 1925 Theodore resigned as Premier and stood for the Queensland seat of Herbert in the federal election but was unexpectedly defeated by Lewis Nott by 268 votes 9 Federal politics edit nbsp Theodore as a federal MP in the 1920s Theodore was elected to the House of Representatives for the seat of Dalley in Sydney at a 1927 by election His status as an outsider in Sydney Labor politics was a permanent problem for him but he soon made his mark in federal Parliament In 1929 he became Deputy Leader of the Labor Party and Deputy Opposition Leader under James Scullin In October 1929 Scullin defeated the conservative government of Stanley Bruce and became Prime Minister while Theodore became Treasurer and de facto Deputy Prime Minister citation needed Two days after the Scullin government was sworn in the US stock market crashed The effects of the Great Depression were soon felt in Australia and the Scullin government like others was hard pressed to deal with mounting unemployment and the collapse of world trade on which Australia s export based economy depended Theodore an early advocate of Keynesian economics favoured deficit spending to rejuvenate the economy However Works and Railways Minister Joseph Lyons and Trade Minister James Fenton supported a more traditional deflationary approach citation needed Meanwhile a conservative government had taken power in Queensland and appointed a Royal Commission to investigate Theodore s financial dealings as Premier The Commission found that Theodore and another former Queensland Premier William McCormack had corruptly profited by authorising the purchase by the state of a copper mine at Mungana while concealing the fact that they had a financial interest in the mine which furthermore was not economically viable In July 1930 the Mungana affair forced Theodore s resignation 10 11 Without Theodore s leadership and financial skills the Scullin government drifted into deeper crisis When it became apparent that the Queensland government did not intend charging Theodore with any offence Scullin re appointed him as Treasurer in January 1931 Lyons and Fenton felt that Scullin should have waited until Theodore had been formally cleared and resigned from cabinet in protest Two months later they and three of their supporters crossed the floor to the non Labor opposition and eventually joined forces with the Nationalists to form the United Australia Party led by Lyons citation needed The Depression edit nbsp Theodore with Prime Minister James Scullin in December 1929 During 1931 Theodore faced the greatest economic crisis in Australian history The government imported an advisor from the Bank of England Dr Otto Niemeyer who recommended an orthodox solution including sharp reductions in government spending such as pensions and unemployment benefits The radical Premier of New South Wales Jack Lang on the other hand campaigned for the repudiation of Australia s debt to bond holders in London citation needed Theodore rejected both these alternatives and proposed instead an expansion of credit to farmers and small business through the issue of fiduciary notes which could be redeemed after the Depression His Fiduciary Notes Bill was denounced as financially unsound by orthodox economists and the banks It was eventually defeated in the Senate which was still controlled by the conservative opposition Theodore has been described as a visionary proto Keynesian for this proposal although it cannot be known what effect his measures would have had on the Depression had the bill been passed citation needed In March 1931 Lang s supporters in Parliament deserted the main body of Labor Combined with the defection of Lyons and his supporters a few weeks earlier this cost Scullin his majority In November the UAP and Langites rose to defeat the government on a non confidence motion and an election was held in December Theodore had no base of support in Sydney and he lost his seat to Lang candidate Sol Rosevear This ended Theodore s political career although during the 1930s several offers were made to him to return citation needed He was the only sitting treasurer to lose his seat until Josh Frydenberg in 2022 citation needed Later life edit nbsp Theodore 1945 by William Pidgeon Newspaper industry edit Theodore left politics entirely after his defeat 12 In 1932 Theodore began a business relationship with 25 year old Frank Packer the son of newspaper industry veteran R C Packer The duo formed Sydney Newspapers Limited with the aim of acquiring The World a daily newspaper published by the Australian Workers Union that was known to be in financial difficulties For 100 they acquired the rights to lease the masthead and plant for one year It was subsequently announced that the newspaper would be re branded as The Star and would be priced at 1d one penny compared with 1 d for its major rival The Sun published by Associated Newspapers Limited Hugh Denison the managing director of Associated Newspapers paid Theodore and Packer 86 500 in return for an agreement for them not to publish a daily or Sunday newspaper for three years 13 page needed Theodore invested most of his profits back into Associated Newspapers buying shares at a low price and selling them later for a 500 600 return 14 He and Frank Packer subsequently decided to create a new weekly magazine for women which they titled The Australian Women s Weekly George Warnecke an ALP acquaintance of Theodore s was appointed as the founding editor The new publication proved immensely successful and in 1936 Theodore and Packer joined forces with Denison to form Australian Consolidated Press ACP which became the new publisher of the Women s Weekly and Denison s The Daily Telegraph 13 page needed Theodore served as chairman of the new company but interested himself only in the financial and administrative aspects while Packer concentrated on publishing 15 Fiji edit In 1933 Theodore learned that gold had been found in Fiji on the island of Viti Levu The area of interest had been pegged by Bill Borthwick and leased by Pat Costello both of whom had connections with Queensland Theodore contacted Costello an old acquaintance about the find and offered to finance further exploration of the area He formed a syndicate with Frank Packer John Wren and Wren s associate Patrick Cody with each of them holding a quarter stake 16 Geological findings were initially unfavourable Eventually three mines were established Emperor Loloma and Dolphin with Theodore as managing director of all three Their success sparked a minor gold rush but by the end of 1936 the three mines were the only ones remaining By 1943 Loloma alone had yielded 10 million worth of gold and paid over 2 million in dividends 17 Theodore took a keen interest in the welfare of the miners He advised the government on the creation of medical benefits and workers compensation schemes while the company town had three schools a golf course a bowling green tennis courts a dispensary and a maternity hospital 18 Due to his success in Fiji Theodore was approached by the British administrations in Borneo and the Solomon Islands to lead prospecting expeditions 18 Neither were successful and he contracted malaria while in Borneo upon his return he was presented with a tabua polished whale s tooth and elevated to the chiefly rank of ratu Theodore took up full time residence in Fiji returning to Australia only for business trips and trout fishing He had a residence 10 miles 16 km outside of Suva and while at the mines lived in a bure 19 World War II edit In March 1939 Prime Minister Joseph Lyons cabled Theodore in Fiji asking him to return to Australia and co ordinate the country s national resources for defence purposes However due to Lyons defection from Labor being a key contributor to Theodore s political demise Theodore therefore declined stating that in the absence of some emergency involving the national safety I would like to keep out of politics 20 In the event however Lyons offer became moot when he died the following month April before anything could be arranged 21 In May 1940 the Loan Council offered him the position of coordinator of works This proved highly controversial among members of the government and Prime Minister Robert Menzies issued a statement explaining that the offer had been made entirely by the Loan Council and would have to be ratified by cabinet 22 Theodore eventually agreed in February 1942 to oversee the creation of the Allied Works Council with himself as Director General of Allied Works He subsequently established the Civil Constructional Corps CCC to undertake construction work requested by the military 23 Theodore faced criticism and political interference from his former opponents in the ALP particularly Jack Lang and Eddie Ward the Minister for Labour and National Service He requested that the Department of Labour and National Service provide the CCC with lists of men available for work but Ward refused to allow the information to be issued The corps had to resort to telephone directories and electoral rolls in order to recruit sufficient workers Ward then attacked Theodore for calling up elderly and deceased men 24 In September 1942 Theodore tendered his resignation to Curtin citing Ward s lack of cooperation 25 Curtin relaxed political controls and gave him additional powers including the ability to prosecute men who refused to work He rescinded his resignation and eventually left the position in October 1944 26 Final years edit Theodore was a delegate to the Imperial Press Conference in London in 1946 He resumed his work in Fiji and considered moving there permanently However the following year he was diagnosed with a serious heart condition His health declined rapidly and he began handing business responsibilities to his children he resigned from ACP in January 1949 26 After several days in a coma Theodore died at his flat in Edgecliff on 9 February 1950 at the age of 65 27 28 His funeral was held at St Mary s Cathedral Sydney with the mass celebrated by his friend James Duhig Catholic Archbishop of Brisbane 29 He was buried at South Head Cemetery 7 Personal life editTheodore married Esther Mahoney on 20 December 1909 She worked as a photographic tinter and was the daughter of a cabinetmaker from Toowoomba 30 The couple had two sons and two daughters 7 She was eleven years his senior The couple were estranged at the time of Theodore s death in 1950 31 After Ted s death his son John assumed charge of the family s joint business interests with Frank Packer and he became the first managing director of Channel 9 citation needed Assessment editThe Mungana affair likely cost Theodore a chance to become prime minister and would irreparably taint his reputation during his lifetime and beyond Historian Ross Fitzgerald has called him the most talented Labor politician never to be prime minister of Australia and noted that his admirers include Paul Keating Bob Katter and Jack Lang his former opponent 32 Named in his honour editThe following things were named after Theodore Theodore a town in the Shire of Banana 33 Electoral district of Theodore an electorate in the Queensland Legislative Assembly created in the 2017 Queensland state electoral redistribution 34 Theodore suburb of Canberra 35 Notes edit Anglified modification of his fathers surname Teodorescu References edit a b Fitzgerald 1994 p 1 a b Fitzgerald 1994 p 2 Young 1971 p 8 Young 1971 p 9 Part 2 15 Alphabetical Register of Members of the Legislative Assembly 1860 2017 and the Legislative Council 1860 1922 PDF Queensland Parliamentary Record 2015 2017 The 55th Parliament Queensland Parliament Archived from the original on 26 April 2020 Retrieved 27 April 2020 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link Representatives of Queensland State Electorates 1860 2012 PDF Queensland Parliament Archived PDF from the original on 1 April 2015 Retrieved 30 January 2015 a b c Cain Neville 1990 Edward Granville Theodore 1884 1950 Australian Dictionary of Biography Vol 12 National Centre of Biography Australian National University ISSN 1833 7538 Archived from the original on 24 October 2019 Retrieved 26 October 2019 Ross McMullin The Light on the Hill The Australian Labor Party 1891 1991 Farquharson John 2000 Lewis Windermere Nott 1886 1951 Australian Dictionary of Biography Vol 15 National Centre of Biography Australian National University ISSN 1833 7538 Archived from the original on 23 March 2007 Retrieved 18 August 2007 Advertising The Week Vol CIX no 2 846 Queensland Australia 11 July 1930 p 1 Archived from the original on 27 May 2022 Retrieved 5 November 2017 via National Library of Australia Sequel to Mungara Report Camperdown Chronicle Vol LVI no 4490 Victoria Australia 8 July 1930 p 5 Archived from the original on 27 May 2022 Retrieved 5 November 2017 via National Library of Australia Young 1971 p 155 156 a b Young Sally 2019 Paper Emperors The Rise of Australia s Newspaper Empires NewSouth ISBN 978 1742244471 Young 1971 p 161 Young 1971 p 162 Young 1971 p 163 Young 1971 p 166 a b Young 1971 p 167 Young 1971 p 168 Young 1971 p 170 Ted Theodore the proto Keynesian Treasury gov au treasury gov au Archived from the original on 31 October 2023 Retrieved 12 February 2024 Young 1971 p 171 Young 1971 p 172 Young 1971 p 173 Young 1971 p 174 a b Young 1971 p 175 Young 1971 p 176 Death Of E G Theodore Telegraph 9 February 1950 Archived from the original on 11 November 2019 Retrieved 26 October 2019 Funeral of Mr Theodore The Age 13 February 1950 Archived from the original on 15 November 2019 Retrieved 26 October 2019 Young 1971 pp 18 19 Fitzgerald Ross E G Red Ted Theodore 1884 1950 Journal of the Royal Historical Society of Queensland 15 8 362 4 Archived from the original on 9 July 2020 Retrieved 29 January 2021 via UQ eSpace Scandal that stole Red Ted s chance to tackle top job The Australian 13 April 2013 Theodore town in Shire of Banana entry 34200 Queensland Place Names Queensland Government Retrieved 30 October 2017 Queensland Redistribution Commission 26 May 2017 Determination of Queensland s Legislative Assembly Electoral Districts PDF Queensland Government Gazette pp 169 173 Archived PDF from the original on 29 October 2017 Retrieved 29 October 2017 Australia For Everyone Canberra The Names of Canberra australiaforeveryone com au Archived from the original on 13 March 2016 Retrieved 6 March 2018 Sources edit Fitzgerald Ross 1994 Red Ted The Life of E G Theodore University of Queensland Press ISBN 0702226491 Young Irwin 1971 Theodore His Life and Times Alpha Books ISBN 0855530642 Further reading edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ted Theodore Kennedy Kett 1978 The Mungana Affair State Mining and Political Corruption in the 1920s PDF University of Queensland Press ISBN 0702210285 Political offices Preceded byT J Ryan Premier of Queensland1919 1925 Succeeded byWilliam Gillies Preceded byDr Earle Page Treasurer of Australia1929 1930 Succeeded byJames Scullin Preceded byJames Scullin Treasurer of Australia1931 1932 Succeeded byJoseph Lyons Parliament of Queensland Preceded byMichael Woods Member for Woothakata1909 1912 Succeeded byAbolished Preceded byNew Division Member for Chillagoe1912 1925 Succeeded byJohn O Keefe Parliament of Australia Preceded byWilliam Mahony Member for Dalley1927 1931 Succeeded bySol Rosevear Party political offices Preceded byT J Ryan Leader of the Labor Party in Queensland1919 1925 Succeeded byWilliam Gillies Preceded byArthur Blakeley Deputy Leader of the Australian Labor Party1929 1931 Succeeded byFrank Forde Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ted Theodore amp oldid 1214912654, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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