Billy Davies (politician) explained

Billy Davies
Constituency Mp:Cunningham
Parliament:Australian
Predecessor:New seat
Successor:Victor Kearney
Term Start:10 December 1949
Term End:17 February 1956
Birth Date:1884
Birth Place:Abertillery, Wales, UK
Death Place:Wollongong, New South Wales, Australia
Nationality:Welsh Australian
Spouse:Edith Hartshorn
Party:Labor Party
Children:2
Occupation:Miner

William Davies (1884 – 17 February 1956) was an Australian politician, born in Abertillery in Wales to the coalminer William Davies and his wife Mary, née Williams. As a child he worked in the coalmines, but won a miners' scholarship to a summer school at the University of Oxford, where he became a Methodist lay preacher. He married Edith Hartshorn on 4 August 1903 and the couple moved to New South Wales in 1912, when Davies became a miner in the Wollongong area, soon rising to become an official of the Australian Coal and Shale Employees' Federation.

Davies won the New South Wales Legislative Assembly seat of Wollongong in 1917, representing the Labor Party, having defeated the sitting John Nicholson who had been elected as a Labor member but joined the Nationalist Party following the 1916 conscription split.[1] His 1920 election campaign concentrated on the 1917 strike, John Brown's contract compensation, business profiteering and the wheat pool scandal.[2] [3] He went on to dominate Labor politics in the area for the next forty years, and became a loyal supporter of New South Wales Premier Jack Lang, who made Davies Minister of Public Instruction in 1927, and Minister for Education from 1930 until 1932.[4]

In 1949 Davies resigned from the Legislative Assembly in order to contest the new federal seat of Cunningham, which he held until his death on 17 February 1956. He was remembered by H. V. Evatt as "a great orator who had helped to inspire coalminers during industrial troubles".

References

 

Notes and References

  1. 1917 . Wollongong . 3 May 2020.
  2. News: Mr. W. Davies . . 25 February 1920 . 26 September 2022 . 4 . Trove.
  3. Web site: Royal Commission of Inquiry into the State Wheat Pool . State Archives and Records . . 9 December 1921 . 22 January 2019 .
  4. Mr William Davies (2) (1883-1956) . 1380 . Yes . 30 November 2019.