Jack Beasley Explained

Honorific-Prefix:The Right Honourable
Jack Beasley
Office:High Commissioner of Australia to the United Kingdom
Predecessor:Stanley Bruce
Successor:Sir Norman Rupert Mighell CMG
Term Start:14 August 1946
Term End:2 September 1949
Office2:Minister for Defence
Primeminister2:Frank Forde
Ben Chifley
Predecessor2:John Curtin
Successor2:Frank Forde
Term Start2:6 July 1945
Term End2:14 August 1946
Office3:Minister for Supply and Shipping
Primeminister3:John Curtin
Predecessor3:(new title)
Successor3:Bill Ashley
Term Start3:17 October 1942
Term End3:6 July 1945
Office4:Minister for Supply and Development
Primeminister4:John Curtin
Predecessor4:George McLeay
Successor4:(title abolished)
Term Start4:7 October 1941
Term End4:17 October 1942
Constituency Mp5:West Sydney
Parliament5:Australian
Predecessor5:William Lambert
Successor5:William O'Connor
Term Start5:17 November 1928
Term End5:14 August 1946
Birth Date:1895 11, df=yes
Birth Place:Werribee, Victoria, Australia
Death Place:Darlinghurst, New South Wales, Australia
Resting Place:Frenchs Forest Bushland Cemetery
Party:Labor
Otherparty:Lang Labor (1931–36)
ALP (Non-Communist) (1940–41)
Occupation:Unionist

John Albert Beasley (9 November 1895 – 2 September 1949) was an Australian politician who was a member of the House of Representatives from 1928 to 1946. He served in the Australian War Cabinet from 1941 to 1946, and was a government minister in the Curtin and Chifley governments. Beasley was a member of the Australian Labor Party, although on two occasions he left the party to join the breakaway Lang Labor groups, leading the faction in federal parliament. He concluded his career as High Commissioner to the United Kingdom from 1946 until his death in 1949.

Early life

Beasley was born on 9 November 1895 in Werribee, Victoria, the son of Catherine (née Hogan) and John Beasley. His mother was born in County Tipperary, Ireland, while his Australian-born father was a blacksmith and farmer. Beasley was educated at St Andrew's Catholic Primary School, but left at a young age to work on his father's farm. He later worked as a labourer in Tasmania and Adelaide, and then trained as an electrician in Port Augusta, South Australia, and Broken Hill, New South Wales. In 1918, Beasley moved to Sydney and found work at the Cockatoo Island Dockyard. He was employed by the Sydney Municipal Council in 1920, becoming an electrical installation inspector and then supervisor of appliance sales in the electricity department in 1926. On 5 February 1927, he married Alma Matilda Creighton at a Catholic church in Manly. The couple had two sons and two daughters together.[1]

Early political involvement

Beasley became involved in the labour movement as a shop steward for the Electrical Trades Union of Australia (ETU). He served as the union's president from 1924 to 1930, and was one of its delegates to the Labor Council of New South Wales, serving as president of the council from 1922 to 1928. Beasley was elected to the state executive of the Australian Labor Party in June 1923. Although initially sympathetic to communism and supportive of Jock Garden, he later moderated his views. He represented the ALP at the International Labour Conference in Switzerland in 1926, and returned to Australia "appalled at the excesses of Italian fascism and disconcerted by the realities of Russian communism".[1]

Federal politics

In 1928 Beasley was elected for the safe Labor seat of West Sydney. When Labor under Jim Scullin won the 1929 federal election, he became an Honorary Minister (minister without portfolio), but he resigned this position in 1931 in protest at the Scullin government's policies in response to the Great Depression. He became the leading lieutenant of the radical Premier of New South Wales, Jack Lang, and when Lang decided to break with the federal ALP Beasley resigned from the ALP Caucus and became leader of the Lang Labor party in federal Parliament. In December 1931 he led his group across the floor of the House and brought down the Scullin government on a vote of confidence. This earned him the nickname "Stabber Jack" for the rest of his life.[1]

From 1932 to 1936 Beasley led the Lang group in opposition to both the United Australia Party government of Joseph Lyons and Federal Labor. In 1935 Scullin retired and in early 1936 the new federal leader, John Curtin, brought about a reunification of the NSW and Federal parties, and Beasley joined the Opposition front bench. But in 1940 Lang again broke off relations with the federal party, although by this time he was no longer Premier and no longer had the support of the NSW Branch as a whole. Nevertheless, Beasley again supported Lang and became leader of the so-called Non-Communist Labor Party in federal Parliament.

World War II

In 1941 Curtin again brought Lang's followers (although not Lang himself) back into the Labor Party. When Curtin became Prime Minister in October 1941, he made Beasley Minister for Supply and Development (later Minister for Supply and Shipping), a vital portfolio in wartime. Beasley proved to be a highly competent minister and played a leading role in co-ordinating Australia's wartime economy and supporting the Allied forces in the Pacific Theatre. Due to ill health he exchanged positions with Bill Ashley in February 1945 to take the undemanding Vice-President of the Executive Council.[1]

High Commissioner to the United Kingdom

When Curtin died in July 1945, his successor Ben Chifley made Beasley Minister for Defence, but Chifley had been a minister in the Scullin government and had been the leading opponent of Lang in the NSW ALP through the 1930s. He had not forgiven Beasley and did not want him in the Cabinet, so in 1946 Beasley was appointed High Commissioner in London. He was appointed to the Privy Council in 1946.[1] and was a leading guest at the 1947 wedding of Princess Elizabeth and Philip, Duke of Edinburgh. .[2] He served as High Commissioner until his sudden death in September 1949 on a visit to Sydney at St Vincent's Hospital, Darlinghurst.

Notes and References

  1. Bede . Nairn . Beasley, John Albert (Jack) (1895–1949) . A130166b . 31 May 2007.
  2. Royal Collection: Seating plan for the Ball Supper Room http://www.royalcollection.org.uk/microsites/royalwedding1947/object.asp?grouping=&exhibs=NONE&object=9000366&row=82&detail=magnify