Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

James Stopford (Australian politician)

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Preceded by
  
James Crawford

Full Name
  
James Stopford

Role
  
Miner

Succeeded by
  
Seat abolished

Nationality
  
Australian

Party
  
Australian Labor Party

Preceded by
  
John Blackley

Resting place
  
Toowong Cemetery

Succeeded by
  
William Demaine

Name
  
James Stopford


James Stopford (Australian politician)

Born
  
22 July 1878 Rockhampton, Queensland, Australia (
1878-07-22
)

Died
  
November 30, 1936, Brisbane, Australia

Political party
  
Australian Labor Party

James (Stoppy) Stopford (1878–1936) was a miner, union organiser and politician in Queensland, Australia. He was a Member of the Queensland Legislative Assembly.

Contents

James Stopford (Australian politician) James Stopford Australian politician Wikipedia

Early life

James Stopford was born on 22 July 1878 in Rockhampton, the son of John Joshua Stopford and his wife Elizabeth (née Wilson). His family moved to Mount Morgan when he was two yearas old. He attended Mount Morgan State School.

James Stopford commenced his working life as a miner and engine driver at the Mount Morgan Mine. He was an active member of the Australian Labor Party and the Australian Workers Union and was dismissed by the company for his union activity. He later become an organiser for the union and a member of the branch executive for the party.

He married Ellen Williams in 1901.

Politics

A member of the Australian Labour Party, James Stopford contested the newly created electorate of Mount Morgan in the 1912 election but was unsuccessful (Ministerialist James Crawford was elected). However, he was elected to the Queensland Legislative Assembly in the Mount Morgan in the 1915 election and held the seat until the 1932 election. During that time, he was a Minister without Office from 6 October 1922 to 2 July 1923 and then Home Secretary from 2 July 1923 to 21 May 1929.

At the 1932 state election, the seat of Mount Morgan was abolished and absorbed into Fitzroy, so Stopford decided to contest Maryborough against the sitting member John Blackley of the Country and Progressive National Party. As part of a statewide swing to the Labor Party, Stopford was elected with a majority of 6,000 in Maryborough. Stopford held Maryborough in the 1935 election. While representing Maryborough, Stopford was appointed Secretary for Mines from 17 June 1932.

Death

Stopford was admitted to the Mater Misericordiae Hospital on 16 September 1936 with a serious condition described as "blood pressure" at the time but later as a "severe haemorrhage". He was released from hospital in early October for further recuperation at his home in Coorparoo. Although he briefly attended Parliament and a Cabinet meeting, he remained too ill to undertake his regular duties and went to Southport for further recuperation. On 30 November 1936, he suffered further haemorrhaging at Southport and was rushed by ambulance to the Mater Misericordiae Hospital in Brisbane, where he died later that day.

A state funeral was held at St Stephen's Cathedral in Brisbane on 1 December 1936 after which he was buried in Toowong Cemetery. His wife and daughter predeceased him.

Legacy

In 1936, The Worker said that Stopford's greatest contribution was through his efforts to provide for miners who were suffering from miner's phthisis. Labor candidate William Demaine won the resulting by-election in Maryborough on 27 February 1937.

References

James Stopford (Australian politician) Wikipedia