Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

John Earle (Australian politician)

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Preceded by
  
Elliott Lewis

Preceded by
  
Rudolph Ready

Succeeded by
  
Elliott Lewis

Name
  
John Earle

Preceded by
  
Albert Solomon

Role
  
Australian Politician

Succeeded by
  
Walter Lee


John Earle (Australian politician) John Earle Australian politician Wikipedia


Born
  
15 November 1865 Bridgewater, Tasmania (
1865-11-15
)

Died
  
February 6, 1932, Kettering, Australia

Political party
  
Australian Labor Party, Nationalist Party of Australia

John Earle (15 November 1865 – 6 February 1932) was an Australian politician and the first Labor Premier of Tasmania.

Contents

Early life

Born into a farming family of Cornish descent in Bridgewater, Tasmania, Earle left home at 17 to work as a blacksmith's apprentice in a Hobart foundry. He studied mechanical engineering at night school, but left in 1891 for work as a tin miner and gold prospector in Zeehan and then Corinna. Returning to Zeehan in about 1898 he was elected president of the Amalgamated Miners' Association of Victoria and Tasmania, and represented this association at several annual conferences. He was also a member of the local council and chairman of the hospital board.

Political career

After an active career as an organiser for the union, Earle helped found the Tasmanian Workers' Political League, forerunner to the Australian Labor Party (Tasmanian Branch). In 1903, he became the organisation's first president.

In the same year, Earle stood for the Tasmanian House of Assembly in the electorate of Waratah, but was defeated by three votes. He was successful with his second attempt in 1906 and led the first Tasmanian Labor government into office in 1909; a minority government which lasted a week. For the 1909 election, he transferred to Franklin after Tasmania adopted the Hare-Clark proportional representation system. He returned to office as Premier and Attorney-General in 1914, serving until his defeat at the polls in 1916. While leader of the opposition Earle addressed meetings in favour of conscription and was expelled from the Labor Party.

In March 1917 Earle, who had by then joined the Nationalist Party of Australia, was elected by the Parliament of Tasmania to fill a vacancy in the Australian Senate. He retained his seat in the 1917 election. He became Vice-President of the Executive Council in the Hughes ministry from December 1921 to February 1923. He was defeated at the Senate election held in December 1922, and again in 1925, as a Nationalist candidate. In 1928 he stood as an independent candidate in Franklin, but was unsuccessful.

Death

Earle died at Kettering, Tasmania, on 6 February 1932. He left a widow but no children. His cousin Alicia O'Shea Petersen would later follow Earle into politics as a prominent suffragist.

References

John Earle (Australian politician) Wikipedia