Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

William McWilliams

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Deputy
  
Edmund Jowett

Preceded by
  
Alfred Seabrook

Resigned
  
October 22, 1929

Succeeded by
  
Alfred Seabrook

Role
  
Journalist

Preceded by
  
New seat

Name
  
William McWilliams

Succeeded by
  
Earle Page

Succeeded by
  
Charles Frost


William McWilliams httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Died
  
October 22, 1929, Hobart, Australia

Spouse
  
Josephine Fullerton (m. 1893)

Political party
  
Revenue Tariff Party, Free Trade Party

William James McWilliams (12 October 1856 – 22 October 1929) was the inaugural leader of the Country Party of Australia.

Contents

Early life

Born in Bream Creek, near Sorell, Tasmania, the son of Irish immigrants who ran the local school. Originally trained as a teacher, McWilliams became a journalist in 1877, rising to editor of the Launceston Telegraph in 1883. Marrying Josephine Fullerton in Melbourne on 19 October 1893, McWilliams’s role as editor helped his stature in the local community enough to ensure his election to the Tasmanian House of Assembly for the electorate of Ringarooma in the 1893 election.

An Australian Rules football fan, in 1897 McWilliams founded the Southern Tasmania Football Association and remained a senior figure in Australian Rules football administration in Tasmania.

McWilliams bought the Hobart-based Tasmanian News in 1896 and moved to Hobart shortly after, unsuccessfully standing for the seat of Glenorchy in 1900.

Politics

Switching to federal politics, McWilliams won the Franklin at the 1903 election as a Revenue Tariffist supporting the Free Trade Party on most economic issues.

In parliament, McWilliams advocated strongly on behalf of farmers, investigated the possibility of introducing sugarbeet farming into Tasmania and helped found the Tasmanian meteorological bureau. He also supported giving women and ex-convicts the vote but opposed Federation, believing it should be delayed.

In parliament, McWilliams, like almost all his fellow members, strongly supported the White Australia Policy, but opposed federal spending on issues such as the establishment of the High Court of Australia, a federal department of agriculture, a transcontinental railway and federal acquisition of the Northern Territory. As in state parliament, McWilliams was a staunch advocate on rural matters, supporting the timber industry and primary producers. After assisting in the formation of the Country Party in 1920, McWilliams was appointed as its first federal parliamentary leader.

However McWilliams did not always see eye to eye with his party colleagues and at times voted against the wishes of the party. He was relieved of the leadership of the Country Party in April 1921 and lost his seat at the 1922 election. McWilliams left the Country Party soon after and unsuccessfully contested Franklin at the 1925 election as a Nationalist.

Running as an independent, he regained Franklin in 1928 and was again successful in 1929, although there was little time for celebration following his second win, because McWilliams died in Hobart from angina pectoris within hours of the declaration of the poll. He was survived by his wife, two daughters and a son.

References

William McWilliams Wikipedia