Birth Date: | 3 November 1908 |
Birth Place: | Mangotsfield, Gloucestershire, England |
Alma Mater: | Weymouth College |
Party: | Communist Party of Australia (1935–1948) |
Cecil Herbert Sharpley (3 November 1908 — 6 July 1985) was an English-born Australian trade unionist, communist party apostate, and member of the Communist Party of Australia.
Sharpley was born on 3 November 1908 at Mangotsfield, Gloucestershire, England, the fifth child of clergyman Arthur Henry Sharpley and Cecilia Lucy Chambers (née Stubbs). He was educated at Weymouth College. He left England for Australia in 1928, with the costs funded by the Big Brother Movement.
There, Sharpley befriended priest William Hancock. Sharpley began working on a farm, but soon became homeless. He learned about politics and economics in the State Library Victoria. He got a job in an advertising agency in 1933, and joined the Federated Clerks' Union of Australia and the Australian Labor Party the following year.
In 1935, Sharpley joined the Communist Party of Australia (CPA). On 9 April 1938, he married machinist Veronica Theresa Connolly in Melbourne. On 21 December 1948, he left the CPA and fled to Shepparton. To denounce the party, he worked with journalists of The Herald on a 7-article long investigative journalism piece on the CPA, accusing them of election fraud,[1] with the first being published on 16 April 1949. After a report by Charles Lowe was published, Sharpley's evidence was found unreliable.[2]
On 19 December 1949, he returned to England to his wife, finding a job as an insurance salesman. He also became a Christian. He died on July 6, 1985, of a coronary occlusion at Islington, aged 76.