Sir George Knowles | |
Office1: | Secretary of the Attorney-General's Department |
Term Start1: | 10 February 1932 |
Term End1: | 8 May 1946 |
Predecessor1: | Sir Robert Garran |
Successor1: | Kenneth Bailey |
Office2: | High Commissioner of Australia to South Africa |
Term Start2: | 3 September 1946 |
Term End2: | 22 November 1947 |
Predecessor2: | New office |
Successor2: | Alfred Stirling |
Birth Name: | George Shaw Knowles |
Birth Date: | 14 March 1882 |
Birth Place: | Toowong, Queensland, Australia |
Death Place: | Pretoria, South Africa |
Resting Place: | Woden Cemetery |
Occupation: | Public servant and diplomat |
Sir George Shaw Knowles (14 March 188222 November 1947) was an Australian public servant and diplomat. He served as departmental secretary of the Attorney-General's Department from 1932 to 1946, and was then the inaugural Australian High Commissioner to South Africa from 1946 until his death the following year.
Knowles was born in Toowong, Brisbane, Queensland, on 14 March 1882. He was the son of Mary and George Hopley Knowles; his father was born in Staffordshire, England, while his mother was a native Queenslander. He was educated at Warwick West Boys' School and Toowoomba Grammar School.[1]
In 1898, Knowles joined the Queensland Public Service as a junior clerk,[2] initially working in the Stock Department and later in the Attorney-General's Department. He attended night classes in accountancy at Brisbane Central Technical College.
Knowles joined the Commonwealth Public Service in 1902 as a clerk in the Australian National Audit Office. This required him to move to Melbourne, the temporary capital. He transferred to the Australian Patent Office in 1904, and then to the Attorney-General's Department. Knowles attended evening classes at the University of Melbourne, graduating with Bachelor of Laws (1907), Master of Laws (1908), Bachelor of Arts (1910), and Master of Arts (1912) degrees. In 1916, Knowles was admitted as barrister and solicitor of the High Court.[1]
In 1930, Knowles was appointed to the first Council of the Canberra University College, holding the position continuously until his resignation in 1946,[3] when he left to take on an appointment as Australia's first Australian High Commissioner to South Africa.[4] He and Lady Knowles journeyed to the post on the steamer Nestor, departing 5 July 1946.[5]
Between 1932 and 1946, Knowles held the positions of Solicitor-General of the Commonwealth, Secretary of the Attorney-General's Department and Parliamentary Draftsman.[1]
Knowles was due to retire from the public service in March 1947 (his 65th birthday), but in April 1946 the federal government chose him as the inaugural Australian High Commissioner to South Africa.[6] It was generally understood that Attorney-General H. V. Evatt pushed for the appointment so that he could install his own man, Kenneth Bailey, as departmental secretary.[7] Knowles arrived in Durban in late July and was formally received by Governor-General Gideon Brand van Zyl on 3 September. He was given credentials to present, but did not do so after being informed that it was the South African government's policy that they should not be presented by diplomatic representatives of dominions.[8] Knowles was given no brief by the Australian government, and when he requested written instructions was told that the government had no policy towards South Africa.[9] He proposed to send dispatches back to Australia every two weeks, but in his 16 months in the position eventually sent 160 dispatches, most of which he wrote personally.[10]
Knowles died in Pretoria on 22 November 1947, while still in office as Australian High Commissioner to South Africa. The South African Government arranged a State funeral to celebrate his life and work.[11] After the funeral, his body was returned to Australia,[12] and his remains were interred at Woden Cemetery.
In October 1920, Knowles was made an Officer of the Order of the British Empire. He was promoted to Commander of the Order in June 1928, whilst a draftsman in the Attorney-General's Department. In January 1939, whilst serving as Solicitor-General, Knowles was knighted.
In 1950, Lady Knowles donated money to the Council of the Canberra University College to provide an academic prize memorialising her late husband.[3] In 1964, Knowles Place in City, Australian Capital Territory, site of the Canberra Law Courts, was named in honour of George Knowles.