- David Brand
-
The Right Honourable
Sir David Brand
KCMG19th Premier of Western Australia In office
2 April 1959 – 3 March 1971Preceded by Albert Hawke Succeeded by John Tonkin Constituency Greenough Personal details Born 1 August 1912
Dongara, Western Australia, AustraliaDied 15 April 1979 (aged 66)
Carnamah, Western Australia, AustraliaPolitical party Liberal Spouse(s) Doris Elspeth McNeill Sir David Brand KCMG (1 August 1912 – 15 April 1979) was the 19th and longest serving Premier of Western Australia and a Member of the Legislative Assembly from 1945 to 1975.
Contents
Early life
Brand was born in Dongara, Western Australia, the eldest of four children of Albert John Brand, a farmer, and his wife Hilda née Mitchell, whose father Samuel Mitchell was a prominent Cornish Australian[1] geologist and member of the Legislative Council (1884-85) and represented Murchison in the Legislative Assembly (1897-1901).
Brand's parents farmed at Northampton and moved to a farm near Mullewa in 1924. He left school at 14 to work on the farm. At Mullewa he became secretary of the local branch of the Primary Producers' Association, a forerunner of the Farmers Federation.
In 1935, Brand moved to Kalgoorlie and worked at the Golden Horseshoe Mine, as a truck driver, treatment hand, filter specialist and shift boss. In his spare time, he was active in the Methodist Church and as a scoutmaster.
Like Hawke and Tonkin, Brand was Cornish Australian[2]
War service
Following the outbreak of World War II, Brand enlisted in the Australian Imperial Force on 23 November 1939. As a Private, he was assigned to the 2/11th Battalion, part of the 6th Division, which embarked for the Middle East on 20 April 1940. Brand fought in the North African campaign, including the advance on Benghazi, and was promoted to Corporal before the 2/11th was sent to the Greek campaign, in which he was seriously wounded on 24 April 1941.
Brand was eventually sent back to Australia for further treatment, arriving in August, and was discharged as medically unfit in April 1942. He was re-mobilised in September, as an instructor with the 7th Battalion, Volunteer Defence Corps, in Geraldton and was promoted to Warrant Officer in January 1943. With the war effort beginning to wind down, Brand was discharged from the army in January 1945.
Civilian life and political career
Brand married Doris Elspeth McNeill at Mingenew Methodist Church on 20 March 1944. (They were to have three children.) After his army discharge, Brand took over the general store at Dongara.
The incumbent Labor member for the State seat of Greenough, John Newton, was killed in action with the RAAF in 1945. Brand won the seat for the Liberal Party in a by-election that year, defeating Newton's brother by a narrow margin. Brand was the first person in Australia to win election to an Australian parliament as a candidate of the newly formed Liberal Party.
In October 1949, Ross McLarty became Premier and Brand entered the Ministry as Minister for Housing, Forests and Local Government. From April 1950 he was Minister for Works, Water Supply and Housing, working to establish the Anglo-Iranian Oil Company refinery at Kwinana. Brand would later describe this as one of his greatest achievements. He was also involved in the creation of other major industrial projects.
After the Coalition's defeat in 1953, Brand became deputy leader of the Opposition. After McLarty's retirement, Brand was elected party leader on 1 March 1957. The Coalition returned to power in 1959, and Brand was sworn in as Premier on 2 April. His administration retained office at the elections of 1962, 1965, and 1968. This was achieved with the assistance of the West Australian branch of the Democratic Labor Party (DLP) which split the Labor vote in some metropolitan electorates. The DLP was active in Western Australia between 1959 and 1974.
In 1960, the Federal government lifted its embargo on iron exports, which had been in place since 1938, enabling exploitation of large iron deposits in the Pilbara. The mining of large bauxite deposits in the Darling Scarp also commenced, along with expansion of mineral processing at Kwinana and the South West. Federal finance for the Ord River Scheme was also secured by Brand's government. Substantial oil and gas deposits were discovered in the Pilbara. In 1968, Western Australia ceased to be a net recipient of federal financial assistance. In June 1969, Brand was knighted.
The mining-pastoral boom of the 1960s gave the Brand government a number of electoral victories over their Labor opponents. However, the rapid growth of the Perth metropolitan area and the strain this put on essential services gradually eroded the government's popularity. In addition, Brand's relations with the federal Liberal Party worsened after the retirement of Robert Menzies in 1966. While the Brand government suffered from a series of controversies relating to environmental, heritage, Aboriginal and housing issues, the impact of production quotas for wheat, imposed by the Gorton government led to open conflict with the federal Liberal Party.
In the midst of this conflict the governments attempt to demolish the remains of the Colonial Barracks ("the Barracks Arch") immediately opposite the parliament building led to a parliamentary revolt within the Liberal Party. Brand prevented this by dropping the proposal, and agreeing to allow the National Trust to restore the Arch. However, the strains this had caused within the government became evident when Brand collapsed while speaking publicly in 1971. He recovered, but the Coalition lost the election that year by one seat.
Brand retired as leader of the Liberal Party in 1973 and was replaced by his deputy Sir Charles Court. He died of heart disease in Carnamah in 1979.
The federal electoral Division of Brand in Western Australia, created in 1984, is named after him as is the Brand Highway and the Sir David Brand Primary School.[1] From 1988 to 1995, the West Australian Tourism Awards were named the Sir David Brand Awards, in recognition of his work to advance the tourism industry.[2]
See also
- Brand-Watts Ministry (1959–1962)
- Brand-Nalder Ministry (1962–1971)
References
- ^ Payton, Philip. The Cornish Overseas, 2005.
- ^ http://www.busby.net/cawa/culture.html
Political offices Preceded by
Albert HawkePremier of Western Australia
1959 – 1971Succeeded by
John TonkinParty political offices Preceded by
Sir Ross McLartyLeader of the Liberal Party of Australia (WA division)
1957 – 1973Succeeded by
Sir Charles CourtPremiers of Western Australia Forrest · Throssell · Leake · Morgans · Leake · James · Daglish · Rason · Moore · Wilson · Scaddan · Wilson · Lefroy · Colebatch · Mitchell · Collier · Mitchell · Collier · Willcock · Wise · McLarty · Hawke · Brand · Tonkin · C. Court · O'Connor · Burke · Dowding · Lawrence · R. Court · Gallop · Carpenter · BarnettCategories:- 1912 births
- 1979 deaths
- Australian Methodists
- Premiers of Western Australia
- Leaders of the Opposition in Western Australia
- Members of the Western Australian Legislative Assembly
- Western Australian Liberal politicians
- Knights Commander of the Order of St Michael and St George
- Australian knights
- Australian people of Cornish descent
- People from Dongara, Western Australia
- Treasurers of Western Australia
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