Sneha Girap (Editor)

George Kerr (Australian politician)

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Preceded by
  
Tommy Ryan

Occupation
  
Blacksmith, Grazier

Succeeded by
  
T. J. Ryan

Party
  
Australian Labor Party


Nationality
  
English

Role
  
Australian politician

Full Name
  
George Kerr

Name
  
George Kerr

Resting place
  
Toowong Cemetery

George Kerr (Australian politician)

Born
  
7 February 1853 Beadnell, Northumberland, England (
1853-02-07
)

Other political affiliations
  
Ministerial, Opposition, Independent

Spouse(s)
  
Florence McCulloch (m.1882 d.1883), Susan Jane Moore (nee Deacon) (m.1891)

Died
  
January 18, 1930, Brisbane, Australia

Political party
  
Australian Labor Party

George Kerr (1853–1930) was an Australian politician, grazier, and blacksmith. He was a Member of the Queensland Legislative Assembly.

Contents

Early life

Kerr was born on 7 February 1853 at Beadnell, Northumberland, England and after training to become a blacksmith moved to Queensland in 1877.

He became a mining speculator on the Croydon goldfields and then set up his own forge in Tambo, Queensland to service mining operations in the local region.

Politics

Kerr became involved in local politics for the Australian Labor Party, and in 1893 he was elected to represent the electoral district of Barcoo in the Legislative Assembly of Queensland and served in that post until 1909. He rose to senior positions within the party, culminating in his election as leader of the Queensland Parliamentary Labor Party in 1904 after the death of his predecessor William Browne. Kerr's leadership was complicated by a split in the party in 1905 in which he and other senior Labor figures opted to form a coalition with the Liberal Party to achieve statewide reforms. Although initially he commanded the confidence of the party, a state conference of the party in 1907 rejected Kerr's leadership and the Liberal-Labor coalition, opting to go into the 1907 state election alone. Kerr continued in parliament as an independent Labor member but was challenged by official Labor candidates until his defeat in his seat in 1909.

Later life

Kerr died on 18 January 1930 in Brisbane and was buried in Toowong Cemetery.

References

George Kerr (Australian politician) Wikipedia