Book Details

The Biographical Dictionary of the Australian Senate

Volume 1, 1901–1929

Volume 1

Edited by Ann Millar (Department of the Senate)

The first volume of this readable and authoritative work of reference will provide readers with a biographical account of Australian senators whose period of prominence was between 1901 and 1929.

Opinion

‘The editor of this volume, Ann Millar, has assembled a distinguished list of usual suspects who have contributed professional and well-researched biographies of the individual senators. it is an important contribution to the history of the centenary of Federation, throwing some light on a group of men often more distinguished in their lives outside politics than as politicians.’ (John Button, The Age, 18 November 2000)

‘A valuable contribution to the history of federation . . . It succeeds as an institutional history and an anthology and as an excellent reference book, lending itself to pleasant browsing rather than a straight reading.’ (Sylvia Marchant, The Canberra Times, 3 February 2001)

About this Title

The Biographical Dictionary of the Australian Senate covers the period 1901–1929, the period in which the Parliament operated from Melbourne. This first volume provides short articles on Australia’s Senators during the first thirty years of the Federal Parliament. These entries place particular emphasis on the events of a Senator’s parliamentary experience, contributions to debates, committee work, parliamentary positions as well as ministerial appointments.

It provides also a window on the colonial and post-colonial societies in which these ninety-nine Senators and their three Clerks lived and worked. It explains how miners, merchants, constitutionalists, soldiers, printers, trade unionists, adventurers and pastoralists became Senators, and how, in an essentially egalitarian society, they melded together as Australia’s first federal parliamentarians. It tells of their work as legislators during a period when Australia was making a unique contribution to democracy itself, and reveals the excitement felt by conservatives and non-conservatives alike as they shaped the beginnings of an Australian nation.

The contribution of these Senators to Australian public life was immense. The Federationists, Richard Baker, John Downer, Thomas Playford, Richard O’Connor, James Walker, Henry Dobson, William Trenwith, Simon Fraser, Josiah Symon and William Zeal retain some elemens of notoriety. Others, such as the South Australian farmer, William Russell, or Charles Montague Graham, a tailor on the Western Australian goldfields, were soon forgotten, even in their own time.

The Biographical Dictionary of the Australian Senate reveals to a new generation the influence and the significance of men who came from all sides of politics and the social spectrum, and were able parliamentarians and true representatives of the democratic process.

This readable and authoritative work of reference will provide readers with a biographical account of all Australian senators, and a history of the Senate since 1901. It makes a scholarly contribution to historical and parliamentary knowledge and fills many gaps in our knowledge of less well-known senators whose careers have not been fully documented before.

Table of Contents

Introduction
New South Wales Senators
Queensland Senators
South Australian Senators
Tasmanian Senators
Victorian Senators
Western Australian Senators
Clerks of the Senate

Appendices:
Elections and Parliaments
Presidents of the Senate
Chairman of Committees in the Senate
Leaders of the Government in the Senate
Leaders of Opposition in the Senate
Ministerial Representation in the Senate and the House of Representatives

About the Author

Ann Millar is a writer and editor who has worked in the Department of the Senate since 1987. She became Director of the Biographical Dictionary Unit in 1997. Her publications include I See No End to Travelling, and Trust the Women: Women in the Federal Parliament.

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978-0-522-84921-9