Ken Gott Explained

Kenneth Davidson Gott
Birth Name:Kenneth Davidson Gott
Birth Date:1922 2, df=yes
Birth Place:Australia
Language:English
Nationality:Australian
Subjects:-->
Notableworks:Voices of hate
Spouse:Beth Gott
Partners:-->

Kenneth Davidson Gott (22 February 1922 – 12 March 1990)[1] was one of the leading left wing activists in Melbourne in the decades after World War Two.[2] Along with Stephen Murray-Smith (1922–1988) he was a student leader and member of the University branch of the Communist Party of Australia in the 1940s.[3]

Career

Gott commenced studies at the University of Melbourne in 1941 joining the Melbourne University Regiment on 6 December, the day of the bombing of Pearl Harbour by the Japanese. He was given approval to return to his studies, and was later declared unfit for active service.[4]

He subsequently worked in a number of unskilled jobs, and casual work at the Melbourne Herald newspaper, as well as research for trade unions. In 1950 he travelled overseas to Prague, to head the International Union of Students weekly news service.[5]

Gott left Czechoslovakia, and was expelled from the Communist Party, disillusioned by the 1956 Russian invasion of Hungary and Khrushchev's revelations of Stalin's terror.[6] However, he remained a political activist assisting the Communist Party press and undertaking research on behalf of the Australian Labor Party and took a significant role in subverting the Communist efforts to manipulate the 1959 ANZ Peace Congress. In Australia, he worked as a journalist for The West Australian and for the Sydney fortnightly newspaper Nation. He was a foundation staff member of The Australian newspaper, becoming features editor 1964–1965. He was a senior editor and research director for Business International, travelling to New York, and later Hong Kong and Bangkok and appointed Asian editor of Business Week, and then Managing Director of Business Asia. Returning to Australia he took a role as senior adviser and personal assistant to Sir Maurice Mawby of the mining company Rio Tinto. He was a prodigious writer and kept extensive papers, which have been acquired by the State Library of Victoria.[7]

Other roles which Gott fulfilled at various times include:

Personal life

Gott courted Beth Serpell (née Noye) after her first husband died during the war, reuniting and marrying her after she had completed a postgraduate scholarship in London. They had three children. Gott died in 1990.

Publications

Notes and References

  1. News: lIn the community Community pays tribute to Ken Gott . . 56 . 23 . Victoria, Australia . 16 March 1990 . 16 July 2022 . 19 . National Library of Australia.
  2. https://archivescollection.anu.edu.au/index.php/ken-gott-collection Noel Butlin Archive Centre ANU, Deposit P36 – Ken Gott Collection
  3. http://www3.slv.vic.gov.au/latrobejournal/issue/latrobe-63/t1-g-t4.html 'Radical Making and Unmaking, The Early Careers of Stephen Murray-Smith and Ken Gott' The Latrobe Journal No 63 Autumn 1999 pp.17–30
  4. Gott MS, Box 3770/11, Registrar, University of Melbourne to KDG, 6 May 1942, official certification that KDG is 'Medically Class II and is not eligible for enlistment in the A.I.F.' 10 May 1943.
  5. McLaren, John (2003) Ken Gott: the fashioning of an activist. In: Free radicals of the left in postwar Melbourne. Australian Scholarly Publishing, Melbourne. https://vuir.vu.edu.au/17579/
  6. McLaren, John (2003) The End of an Affair: Intellectuals and the Communist Party 1956–1959. Journal of Australian Studies, 27 (78). pp. 71–82. ISSN 1444-3058 https://vuir.vu.edu.au/436/1/End_of_an_Affair2-rev.pdf
  7. https://www.atua.org.au/archives/Larc00422.htm Ken Gott papers, State Library of Victoria, MS 13047, Box 3802/4