- Thomas Walker (Australian politician)
Thomas Walker (5 February 1858 – 10 May 1932) was an
Australia npolitician , a member of two different stateparliament s.Walker was born in
Preston ,Lancashire ,England , the son of corn miller and merchant Thomas Walker, and Ellen nee Eccles. He was educated at Leyland Grammar School, then worked as a schoolteacher at Preston for two years. He then emigrated toCanada , where he worked as a farmhand and chemist's assistant. After returning to theUnited Kingdom he work as ajournalist on the "Preston Herald ". He later spent some time in Toledo,Ohio , U.S., where he spent 1876 lecturing onevolution and theoccult . The following year he toured throughNew South Wales , England andSouth Africa , lecturing onspiritualism andpolitics . While in South Africa in 1881, he married Andrietta Maria Somers, with whom he would have two sons and two daughters.Walker returned to Australia in 1882, spending some time in Victoria before settling in New South Wales. He became a prominent public figure through his political lectures, in which he argued for
secularism and an immediate separation of New South Wales from England. In February 1885 he played a prominent role in a meeting held to discuss British government policy towards thePacific Islands , and shortly afterwards he was involved in opposing the deployment of New South Wales troops to theSudan .On 17 February 1887 Walker was elected to the
New South Wales Legislative Assembly seat of Northumberland as a Protectionist. He continued to push for separation from England, helping to form the short-lived Republican Union andRepublican League . He held his Legislative Assembly seat until the election of 25 June 1894, when he unsuccessfully contested the seat of Wallsend. He contested the seat again the following year without success.Some time after 1894, Walker visited
New Zealand , where he taughtelocution , promoted temperance, lectured on various subjects, and wrote for the press. On returning to New South Wales he unsuccessfully contested the seat of Sturt in 1898.In 1899, Walker emigrated to
Western Australia . He found work as a journalist with the "Sunday Times" in Perth, and later with the Kalgoorlie newspapers "Sun" and "Kalgoorlie Miner ". He became editor of the "Sunday Times" in 1901, and was also editor of the "Sun" until 1905.On 27 October 1905, Walker was elected to the
Western Australian Legislative Assembly seat of Kanowna on a Labor ticket. He would hold the seat until his death over 25 years later. From around 1906 he began studyinglaw , and in 1911 was admitted to the Western Australian bar. He was a member of theSenate of theUniversity of Western Australia from 1912 to 1916.When the Labor party won government under
John Scaddan on 7 October 1911, Walker was appointed Minister for Justice and Education, and Attorney General. He held both portfolios until the Scaddan government's defeat on 27 July 1916. He wasSpeaker of the Western Australian Legislative Assembly from 24 July 1924 to 29 July 1930. He died at Inglewood on 10 May 1932, and was buried inKarrakatta Cemetery .References
*cite journal|author=Mansfield, Bruce|title=The Background to Radical Republicanism in New South Wales in the Eighteen Eighties|journal=Historical Studies|volume=5|issue=20|month=May|year=1953|pages=338–348
*Black and Bolton 2001Persondata
NAME=Walker, Thomas
ALTERNATIVE NAMES=
SHORT DESCRIPTION=politician
DATE OF BIRTH=5 February 1858
PLACE OF BIRTH=Preston ,Lancashire ,England
DATE OF DEATH=10 May 1932
PLACE OF DEATH=Inglewood, Western Australia
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