Sam Benson Explained

Sam Benson
Honorific-Suffix:CBE
Constituency Mp:Batman
Parliament:Australian
Predecessor:Alan Bird
Successor:Horrie Garrick
Term Start:1 September 1962
Term End:29 September 1969
Birth Date:1909 7, df=yes
Birth Place:Cheltenham, South Australia
Death Place:Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
Nationality:Australian
Party:Labor (1962–66)
Independent (1966–69)
Occupation:Sailor
Allegiance:Australia
Serviceyears:1939–1945

Samuel James Benson, CBE (12 July 1909 – 26 July 1995) was an Australian politician. Born in Adelaide, he was educated in that city at St Peter's College. He became a wool-classer, then a seaman and Port Phillip pilot, earning the rank of ship's master in 1938.[1]

Benson joined the Royal Australian Navy during World War II, and commanded the .[2]

Having served as Mayor and Councillor on Williamstown City Council,[3] he was elected to the Australian House of Representatives in 1962 as the Labor member for Batman,[4] [5] filling the vacancy formed by the death of Alan Bird. Benson was re-elected in 1963, but was expelled from the ALP in August 1966.[6] The expulsion arose from Benson's support of continued Australian participation in the Vietnam War, and, more specifically, his refusal to resign from an organisation called the Defend Australia Committee, after it had been proscribed by the Federal Executive. This organisation comprised a number of Liberal Party, Democratic Labor Party and right-wing activists, and was supported by B. A. Santamaria.[7] [8] Thereafter he served in parliament as an independent. He was re-elected as an independent in 1966, the first person to achieve this feat in the House of Representatives since Lewis Nott in 1949.

Benson retired in 1969, and served as the General Secretary of the Merchant Service Guild from 1970 to 1972. He died on 26 July 1995.[9]

Notes and References

  1. News: A master mariner and man of the Batman community . The Age . 14 September 1995 . 10 August 2021.
  2. Book: Frame, Tom . HMAS Sydney: Loss and Controversy . Hodder & Stoughton . Rydalmere, NSW . 1993 . 0-340-58468-8 . 32234178 . 178.
  3. J.S. Legge (ed.) (1974), Who's Who in Australia, Herald and Weekly Times Limited, Melbourne, Australia, page 103.
  4. Lyle Allan (1995), 'Sam Benson for Batman and Australia. Labor preselection problems, the ethnic vote, and the ghost of Benson,' People and Place, Vol.3, No.3, Pages 54-56
  5. Andrew Lemon (1983), The Northcote Side of the River, Hargreen Publishing Company, North Melbourne, Page 268.
  6. [Peter Howson (Australian politician)|Peter Howson]
  7. [Michelle Grattan]
  8. Susanna Short (1992), Laurie Short. A Political Life, Allen and Unwin, North Sydney, New South Wales, page 246.
  9. Web site: Carr . Adam . COMMONWEALTH OF AUSTRALIA: LEGISLATIVE ELECTION OF 26 NOVEMBER 1966: VOTING BY CONSTITUENCY: Victoria . Psephos, Adam Carr's Election Archive. 2008 . 2008-10-14.