Walter Cresswell O'Reilly explained

Cresswell O'Reilly
Office:Chief Commonwealth Film Censor
Term Start:November 1928
Term End:June 1942
Predecessor:Robert Wallace
Successor:J. O. Alexander
Office1:10th Mayor of Ku-ring-gai
Predecessor1:George Christie
Successor1:Ernest Selby
Deputy1:Audley Hubert Brennan
James Briton
Ernest Selby
Term Start1:19 March 1929
Term End1:5 December 1933
Office2:Alderman on Ku-ring-gai Municipal Council
Term Start2:10 December 1928
Term End2:January 1935
Term Start3:12 November 1944
Term End3:14 December 1948
Office4:Councillor on Warringah Shire Council
Predecessor4:Frederick Latham
Term Start4:14 November 1939
Term End4:11 December 1941
Constituency4:A Riding
Birth Date:1877 6, df=y
Birth Place:Sydney, New South Wales
Death Place:Pymble, New South Wales, Australia
Spouse:Ethel Jane Vickery
Education:Newington College
University of Sydney

[Walter] Cresswell O'Reilly (6 June 1877 – 20 December 1954) was an Australian public servant who became Chief Commonwealth Film Censor. He "dominated and shaped Australian film censorship" and was able to "define appropriate mass entertainment" for nearly twenty years.[1] He was the founding president of the National Trust of Australia (NSW) and an early urban conservationist.

Early life

Cresswell O'Reilly (he was always known by his second name) was born in New South Wales to Irish-American physician Dr Walter William Joseph O’Reilly and his Ballarat-born wife, Mary Narcissa O’Reilly (née Taylor).

He was educated at Newington College (1894–1896)[2] and the University of Sydney from where he graduated with a Bachelor of Arts in 1903.[3] He married Ethel Jane Vickery, a granddaughter of philanthropist Ebenezer Vickery,[4] in 1909.

Army service

During World War I he served with the Australian Imperial Force in France as a gunner and then as a warrant officer, class 1, with the Army Education Service.

Public service

Before attending university, O'Reilly had been a junior clerk in the Department of Justice. After the war, he returned to the public service as an officer-in-charge in the justice branch of the Attorney-General's Department. In 1925 O'Reilly was nominated by the Methodist Church, the YMCA, and the Businessmen's Efficiency League as the senior Commonwealth film censor in Sydney.[5]

In this position he was de facto chief censor, as most films arrived in Australia through Sydney. Three years later he became chief Commonwealth censor and was reappointed annually. He was joined by Eleanor Glencross who was appointed after lobbying by women's organisations. She was replaced in 1930 by Gwendoline Dorothea Julie Hansen[6] who was appointed for three years and then also reappointed annually. The third member of the board was Colonel LJ Hurley.[7] Up until 1935 they were rejecting half of the films that were assigned for assessment. This proportion was relaxed as the US film industry imposed its own censorship in 1934. O'Reilly retired in 1942. As chief censor he introduced, in 1930, the classification system that graded films 'For General Exhibition' and 'Not Suitable for Children'.[8]

Community service

O'Reilly was a Wesleyan and served as a trustee of Pymble Methodist Church for over 50 years, and was a choirmaster, Sunday-school-superintendent and lay preacher. He was elected to Ku-ring-gai Municipal Council as an alderman and as mayor from 1929 until 1933. As mayor his vision for the Upper North Shore involved what he called the two TPsTown Planning and Tree Planting and hence he became known as the Tree Mayor.[9] As an early conservationist he was president of the State branch of the Australian Forest League and a member of the Forestry Advisory Council.[10] In 1945 he became the founding president of the New South Wales division of the National Trust of Australia. At Wesley College, University of Sydney he was a councillor and treasurer.

Honours

Publications

Bibliography

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://www.adb.online.anu.edu.au/biogs/A110106b.htm Australian Dictionary of Biography
  2. Newington College Register of Past Students 1863–1998 (Syd, 1999) pp147
  3. http://www.bull.usyd.edu.au/as/ Alumni Sidneienses
  4. http://www.adb.online.anu.edu.au/biogs/A060355b.htm Australian Dictionary of Biography
  5. News: OVERCOMING FEAR. . . 30,914 . New South Wales, Australia . 1 February 1937 . 9 May 2024 . 7 . National Library of Australia.
  6. Web site: Vol.11 No.518 (22 January 1930) . 2023-10-24 . Trove . en.
  7. News: 1933-04-06 . FILM CENSORS DEFENDED. . West Australian . 2023-10-24.
  8. http://www.libertus.net/censor/docarchive/oflc_history.html OFLC Annual Reports Extracts 1925–1963
  9. The Pymble Cottages Group The Historian Kathie Reith
  10. http://www.kmc.nsw.gov.au/www/default.asp?guiValue=A8AB54BE-718C-4733-8D78-E86E8AA10643 Ku-ring-gai Council
  11. http://www.nladom-test.nla.gov.au/anbd.bib-an3685496 National Library of Australia