Henry Ernest Boote Explained

Henry Ernest Boote (1865 – 1949) was an Australian editor, journalist, propagandist, poet, and fiction writer.[1]

Biography

Born in Liverpool, England, 20 May 1865, Boote began working as an apprentice to a printer at the age of ten before emigrating to Australia in 1889.[2] That same year he married Mary Jane Paingdestre, and began working in Brisbane as a compositor.

He was an inspired trade unionist and became involved in the Queensland labour movement, writing articles and propagandist from a socialist slant. In 1894, the Australian Labour Federation posted Boote to Bundaberg as editor of the Bundaberg Guardian. In 1896 he moved to Gympie, where he established a paper called The Gympie Truth, and in 1902 became editor of The Worker in Brisbane. He was also the founding editor of The Queensland Worker (1902–11), and The Australian Worker (1914–43) Boote was a friend and associate of Prime Ministers Andrew Fisher, James Scullin, and John Curtin.

Boote died in Rose Bay, New South Wales on 14 August 1949.[3]

Works

Prose

Poetry

Notes and References

  1. Book: Henry Ernest Boote (1865–1949) by Frank Farrell . Henry Ernest Boote (1865–1949) . Australian Dictionary of Biography. https://adb.anu.edu.au/biography/boote-henry-ernest-5288. 6 April 2024.
  2. Australian Poets and Their Works, by William Wilde, Oxford University Press, 1996
  3. Web site: Papers of Henry e. Boote.