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Peter Butler (trade unionist)

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Name
  
Peter Butler

Role
  
Trade unionist

Died
  
September 24, 1995


Peter Michael Butler (31 May 1901 – 24 September 1995) was a New Zealand seaman, trade unionist, communist and local politician.

Contents

Early life

He was born in Whiteabbey, County Antrim, Ireland on 31 May 1901. Butler was largely self-educated, yet proved an effective speaker, writer and organiser later in life. At age 16 Butler joined the Mercantile Marine reserve, serving mostly in the North Sea for the remainder of World War I. After the war Butler became one of the leaders of a militant faction in the seamen’s union and briefly courted communist ideology, which he rejected strongly later in life.

During the late 1920s and early 1930s (the duration of the depression) Butler served as secretary of the Wellington Builders' and General Labourers' Union. On 18 December 1930 Peter Butler married Doris Annie Sevina Cooper at St Paul's Cathedral Church in Wellington (an Anglican church despite Butler being a committed Catholic). Later, he and Doris reaffirmed their marriage vows at a Catholic church in Johnsonville on 28 April 1938.

Political career

In 1928 he was an organizer for Bob Semple in his successful election campaign in Wellington East for the Labour Party. In the 1931 election, he unsuccessfully stood for the Labour Party in the Masterton electorate against the incumbent, George Sykes of the Reform Party. In the next election in 1935, he was defeated by Robert Alexander Wright in the Wellington Suburbs electorate. Butler had better success in local government. He was elected to the Wellington City Council in 1933, only after special votes were counted, and was to remain a Councillor until 1941.

Later life

Butler retired from his union positions in 1972. In the 1985 Queen's Birthday Honours, Butler was made a Commander of the Order of the British Empire, for services to the trade union movement. He died on 24 September 1995 and was buried at Whenua Tapu Cemetery near Pukerua Bay.

References

Peter Butler (trade unionist) Wikipedia