- John McPhee (Australian politician)
Infobox Officeholder
honorific-prefix = Sir
name = John McPhee
honorific-suffix = KCMG
imagesize =
small
caption =
order = 27th
office = Premier of Tasmania
term_start =15 June 1928
term_end =15 March 1934
deputy =
predecessor =Joseph Lyons
successor = Sir Walter Lee
constituency = Denison (1919–1934)
Franklin (1941–1946)
majority =
birth_date = birth date|1878|7|4
birth_place = Yan Yean, Victoria
death_date = death date and age|1952|9|14|1878|7|4
death_place =Hobart ,Tasmania ,Australia
nationality = flagicon|AustraliaAustralia n
party =Nationalist Party of Australia
spouse = Alice Bealey Crompton Dean
relations =
children =
residence =
alma_mater =
occupation =
profession =
net worth =
religion = Anglican
footnotes =Sir John Cameron McPhee, KCMG (
July 4 1878 –14 September 1952 ) was anAustralia n politician and member of theTasmanian House of Assembly . He wasPremier of Tasmania from15 June 1928 to15 March 1934 .Early life
McPhee was born in Yan Yean, Victoria in 1878, the son of Scottish shopkeeper Donald McPhee and his Victorian-born wife Elizabeth McLaughlin. He was educated in state schools until the age of 14 and then spent some time working on the family farm. He then undertook a printing apprenticeship, and worked at a newspaper in Bairnsdale, where he learned reporting, compositing and typesetting.R. P. Davis, [http://www.adb.online.anu.edu.au/biogs/A100347b.htm McPhee, Sir John Cameron (1878 - 1952)] , "
Australian Dictionary of Biography ", Volume 10, Melbourne University Press, 1986, pp 355-356.]McPhee moved to
Hobart ,Tasmania in 1908, where he ran a business college for a number of years. He also started a stationery and business equipment company (J. C. McPhee Pty Ltd), was co-proprietor of the "Huon Times" newspaper, and the director of several Tasmanian companies.Political career
McPhee was a strong supporter of the
temperance movement , and was supported by temperance interests when he unsuccessfully stood for election to theTasmanian House of Assembly at the 1916 election and a subsequent 1918by-election . He was successful at the 1919 election, and won a seat in the Division of Denison for theNationalist Party of Australia . McPhee was appointed to cabinet as Chief Secretary and Minister for Railways from22 August 1922 [http://www.parliament.tas.gov.au/history/tasparl/haministersp3.htm Ministers - House of Assembly - 1856 to 1950] ,Parliament of Tasmania .] , but resigned both posts a year later for business reasons. In October 1923, the Premier Walter Lee was forced to resign by dissidents from the Nationalist and Country parties, andJoseph Lyons was asked to form a Labor government by theGovernor of Tasmania . McPhee supported the Lyons government in a subsequent no-confidence vote and, as Opposition Leader from29 July 1925 , was noted for his co-operative and cordial relationship with Lyons.Reversing the Nationalist Party's heavy defeat at the 1925 election, McPhee led the Nationalists to victory in the 1928 election, by a narrow single seat over Labor. He was sworn in as Premier on
June 15 , also taking the portfolios of Treasurer, Minister for Forestry and the Hydro-Electric Department. The Nationalists won a landslide victory in the 1931 election, winning 19 out of the 30 seats with a nine seat margin over Labor. Prior to the 1934 election, McPhee had been suffering recurring heart problems, and decided to stand down as Premier, handing over to Sir Walter Lee onMarch 15 and retiring from politics. He was knighted KCMG in June.McPhee attempted a political comeback in 1937, unsuccessfully running for the seat of Denison at the 1937 federal election. He was more successful in the 1941 state election, winning a seat in Franklin, although Labor under
Robert Cosgrove won that election. He retired on23 November 1946 to concentrate on his business and humanitarian interests, and died in his sleep fromcardiovascular disease in 1952, aged 74.References
External links
* [http://www.parliament.tas.gov.au/History/tasparl/mcpheej356.htm Tasmanian Parliamentary profile]
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.