ALFRED DEAKIN
G'day folks,
Alfred Deakin, Australia’s
second Prime Minister, was also the fifth and the seventh. He was in office
three times in the first ten years of Federation. Often referred to as ‘the
constructor’, his work in building soundly on the nation’s constitutional
foundations is evident a century later.
Perhaps the finest speaker in the Australian parliament’s first century, Deakin’s love of learning informed his political life. Handsome and intelligent, his courteous manner earned him the nickname ‘Affable Alfred’.
Alfred Deakin was born on 3 August 1856, in Collingwood, Melbourne. His parents, William and Sarah Deakin, emigrated from England in 1849. Their first child, Catherine, was born shortly afterwards.
Deakin was Leader of the Opposition from April
1910 until ill-health forced his resignation on 20 January 1913. Joseph Cook replaced him as leader of the Liberal
Party that Deakin had founded in 1909. Deakin retired from politics when the
parliament was dissolved in May 1913 and Joseph Cook became Prime Minister
after the general election on 31 May 1913.
Deakin participated little in public life after his retirement, though he and Pattie Deakin made an official trip to the International Exposition in San Francisco in February 1915, held to celebrate the opening of the Panama Canal. Suffering increasing ill-health, including a severe progressive memory loss that had first afflicted him in 1908, Deakin found his duties in San Francisco an ordeal.
The Deakins also travelled to London in 1916, returning via New York early in 1917. Deakin’s condition worsened and, in the notebook journals he had always kept, he wrote ‘My memory is but a little fiction’. In September 1919 he suffered a stroke and died on 7 October.
Deakin was given a state funeral, his coffin brought from his house in Walsh Street, South Yarra to Parliament House. It was taken from there in a silent procession through the city streets. He was buried in the St Kilda cemetery next to the graves of his parents.
Pattie Deakin died fifteen years later, on 30 December 1934. She was interred in her husband’s grave.
Perhaps the finest speaker in the Australian parliament’s first century, Deakin’s love of learning informed his political life. Handsome and intelligent, his courteous manner earned him the nickname ‘Affable Alfred’.
Alfred Deakin was born on 3 August 1856, in Collingwood, Melbourne. His parents, William and Sarah Deakin, emigrated from England in 1849. Their first child, Catherine, was born shortly afterwards.
When he
was seven Alfred Deakin went to Melbourne Church of England Grammar School. At
sixteen he began studying law at the University of Melbourne. He was a keen
member of the university’s debating club and other societies promoting radical
thought, including spiritualism. The sixteen-year-old was also the editor of a
spiritualist paper. When he became a barrister in 1878, he had already written
a play (Quentin Massys) and published a long book, A New Pilgrim’s
Progress. His law career was slow to grow and for several years he earned
money writing for a leading Melbourne newspaper, The Age, after meeting
its editor, David Syme, in 1878.
Syme was
influential in the development of his protégé’s ideas, prompting Deakin to
change from a belief in free trade to become a protectionist. Syme also helped
him to win the rural seat of West Bourke in the Victorian parliament in 1879.
Deakin resigned in his maiden speech on 8 July 1879, claiming irregularity in
the poll. He lost the subsequent by-election, but was re-elected in July 1880
and held the seat for ten years.
Alfred
Deakin and Elizabeth Martha Anne (Pattie) Browne, a fellow spiritualist, were
married in 1882. They lived with Deakin’s parents for the next five years. In
1887 they moved with their two small daughters, Ivy and Stella, to their brand-new house,
‘Llanarth’, in Walsh Street, South Yarra. Their third daughter, Vera, was born there in 1891.
Deakin
was an impressive man – dark, handsome and tall, with a rich voice and a keen
mind. He became Commissioner for Public Works and Water Supply in 1883, and
Solicitor-General and Minister of Public Works the following year. In 1885
Deakin secured the passage of the colony’s pioneering Factories and Shops Act,
enforcing regulation of employment conditions and hours of work.
In 1887
Deakin led Victoria’s delegation to the Imperial Conference in London. He was a
young colonial politician who made a strong impact arguing forcibly for more
favourable terms in the colonial naval agreement. With Queensland’s delegate, Samuel Griffith, he confronted the British Prime
Minister, Lord Salisbury, on colonial interest in the New Hebrides.
Deakin
was a passionate campaigner for irrigation. In 1884 he chaired a royal
commission on irrigation and, on an inspection tour to California, met George and William Chaffey. The Chaffey brothers
subsequently demonstrated their novel irrigation techniques at Mildura in 1886,
when Deakin was Minister for Water Supply. Deakin also introduced a radical
bill into the Victorian parliament that, if it had passed, would have made all
natural waters in the colony publicly owned and enabled the construction of
irrigation works. In 1890, he travelled to Ceylon (Sri Lanka) and India, and
published an account of South Asian irrigation in 1893. By that time, however,
Deakin’s paper generated little interest since both drought and economic
depression had struck Australia’s eastern colonies.
After the
fall of the government in October 1890, Deakin remained a backbencher
throughout the 1890s. Like many others, Deakin lost heavily in the 1893 financial
collapse and had to practise law to supplement his salary and repay his debts.
His frustration that the competitive divisions between the colonies prevented a
united front at the 1887 Imperial Conference fuelled his support for Federation
throughout the 1890s.
In 1890
Deakin was Victoria’s delegate to the Australasian Federal Conference, held in
Melbourne, which agreed to hold an intercolonial convention to draft a federal
constitution. The following year, Deakin was the colony’s delegate to this
meeting, the first National Australasian Convention held in Sydney, which
produced a draft Constitution Bill.
Deakin
became Victoria’s most prominent federationist. His splendid oratory enlivened
meetings throughout Victoria, from the annual conference of the Australian
Natives Association in 1893, to the public meetings leading up to the
Federation referendum in June 1898. Deakin was founding chairman of the Federal
League of Victoria in 1894, and attended the Federal Council meeting in Hobart
in 1896.
In 1897 he was a
delegate to the second Australasian Federal Convention, which opened in
Adelaide in March 1897 and concluded in Melbourne in January 1898.
Deakin
and the Victorian Premier, George Turner, ensured the Constitution Bill
passed the Victorian parliament and could be put to the colony’s voters at an
1898 referendum. South Australia, Tasmania and Victoria were the first colonies
to pass Federation referendums. Between April and September 1899, successful
referendums were held in all colonies, except Western Australia, enabling the
Bill to be submitted to the British parliament.
In 1900,
Deakin was a member of the delegation led by Edmund Barton to lobby in London for the
successful passage of the Australian Constitution Bill through the British
parliament. The joy of the delegates when the Bill was passed in June, was
exceeded only by the triumph in every colony when the news was received that it
had become law with Queen Victoria’s assent on 9 July 1900.
Before
the inauguration of the nation on 1 January 1901, Deakin played a strategic
role in undoing the ‘Hopetoun blunder’ – the first Governor-General’s failure
to select Edmund Barton to be the first Prime Minister. Deakin, Victorian
Premier George Turner, and Deakin’s mentor David Syme, were the major force in
ensuring, after a tense few days of negotiation, that Lord Hopetoun reversed his choice of William Lyne.
On
Christmas Day 1900 Barton chose his ministers and, on 1 January 1901, the
Governor-General administered the oaths of the first ministery and Alfred
Deakin became Australia’s first Attorney-General.
After the
first federal elections in March 1901, Deakin served as leader of the House as
well as Attorney-General. He had a heavy workload throughout the first
parliament, with its mass of machinery bills as well as policy legislation on
immigration. Robert Garran took major responsibility for
drafting legislation, though Deakin himself was substantially responsible for
the Public Service and Conciliation and Arbitration bills.
Deakin
had a keen intelligence and great capacity for hard work, and he was persuasive
and admired. His even temper and pleasant manner earned him the nickname
‘Affable Alfred’. When Deakin walked to Parliament House from his home in South
Yarra, he would be waylaid by colleagues eager for his conversation, not on
politics, but on literature, philosophy, and the other interests that made him
a wide-ranging reader and thinker.
On 18
March 1902, Deakin made the speech considered among the finest of his
parliamentary career, and indeed now rated among the finest speeches of the
parliament’s first century. The subject was the Judiciary Bill, which he called
‘the foundation of Commonwealth law’. Deakin had ensured that Samuel Griffith
had a major role in drafting the Bill and, as Attorney-General, Deakin
introduced it in the House. Among those saluting the eloquence of his three-and-a-half-hour
speech were his friends Richard O’Connor and artist Tom Roberts – though Roberts confessed he
had not stayed the entire course.
With the
support of Edmund Barton and Isaac Isaacs, Deakin argued forcefully
against delaying the establishment of the High Court. He viewed the Court as
the essential third pillar of the federal structure once the parliament and
public service were in place. The Bill was not passed until September 1903 and,
in a compromise with budget-wary opponents, the High Court bench was reduced
from five to three judges.
In 1902
Deakin served as Acting Prime Minister from May to September, while Edmund
Barton was overseas for the coronation of King Edward VII and Queen Alexandra. Atlee Hunt, a Sydney protégé of Barton and
Secretary of the Department of External Affairs, took a leading role in dealing
with the prime ministerial business. During Barton’s absence, Hunt and Deakin
developed the working relationship that extended over the next decade, during Deakin’s
three terms as Prime Minister between 1903 and 1910.
Deakin participated little in public life after his retirement, though he and Pattie Deakin made an official trip to the International Exposition in San Francisco in February 1915, held to celebrate the opening of the Panama Canal. Suffering increasing ill-health, including a severe progressive memory loss that had first afflicted him in 1908, Deakin found his duties in San Francisco an ordeal.
The Deakins also travelled to London in 1916, returning via New York early in 1917. Deakin’s condition worsened and, in the notebook journals he had always kept, he wrote ‘My memory is but a little fiction’. In September 1919 he suffered a stroke and died on 7 October.
Deakin was given a state funeral, his coffin brought from his house in Walsh Street, South Yarra to Parliament House. It was taken from there in a silent procession through the city streets. He was buried in the St Kilda cemetery next to the graves of his parents.
Pattie Deakin died fifteen years later, on 30 December 1934. She was interred in her husband’s grave.
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