- Josiah Thomas
Josiah Thomas (
28 April 1863 –5 February 1933 ) was anAustralia n miner and politician.Thomas was born in
Camborne ,Cornwall ,England and went toMexico as a child with his father and later worked in mines in Cornwall. He travelled to Australia in the mid-1880s and worked at the Barrier Range, near Broken Hill. He was appointed as a member of a royal commission on collieries in 1886 and worked as a mining captain and assayer in 1890. He married Henrietta Lee Ingleby in July 1889 and they subsequently had two sons and one daughter.Australian Dictionary of Biography
last=Pennay
first=Bruce
authorlink=
year=1990
id=A120220b
title= Thomas, Josiah (1863 - 1933)
accessdate=2007-10-02] cite web
title =Mr Josiah Thomas (1863 - 1933)
work =Members of Parliament
publisher =Parliament of New South Wales
url =http://www.parliament.nsw.gov.au/prod/parlment/members.nsf/1fb6ebed995667c2ca256ea100825164/40c6d60d3ba67966ca256e600000185d!OpenDocument
accessdate = 2007-10-02 ]Thomas was elected to the executive of the Amalgamated Miners' Association (AMA) in July 1891 and became president of its Broken Hill branch in 1892. He was a member of the Defence Committee formed during the
1892 Broken Hill Miners strike . As a result of his criticism of the magistracy in relation to the arrest of eight fellow committee-members on conspiracy charges, he was dismissed as a as a justice of the peace. The mining companies refused to give him work and he had to take up labouring, although as president of the AMA, he was appointed to aNew South Wales Legislative Assembly inquiry intolead poisoning at the mines in 1892.Political career
Thomas was elected as the
Australian Labor Party member for Alma, covering part of Broken Hill in the Legislative Assembly in 1894, where he campaiged for improvements to workplace health and safety. He opposed the bills for thefederation of Australia because he considered their referenda provisions inadequate.Thomas was elected the the
Australian House of Representatives in the inaugural election in 1901 for the seat of Barrier. He was appointed Postmaster-General in Andrew Fisher's first ministry from November 1908 to June 1909 and his second ministry from April 1910 to October 1911, when he became Minister for External Affairs on the death ofLee Batchelor until the defeat of the government in June 1913. He visited England as a member of the Imperial Parliamentary Association in 1916 and was thus absent during Labor's split over conscription. On his return he joinedBilly Hughes 'Nationalist Party of Australia . Thomas was elected to the Senate in 1917, but lost in 1922. He was re-elected in 1925 but lost again in 1928.After politics, Thomas was active as a
methodist preacher opposed to gambling, smoking and drinking and in particular supportingprohibition of alcohol . He participated in the establishment ofSydney radio station2CH by the New South Wales Council of Churches. Thomas' first wife died in 1901 and he married her sister Clara Ingleby in 1909. One of his sons with Henrietta was killed on the Western Front duringWorld War I . He died ofheart disease in the Sydney suburb of Croydon Park. He was survived by his second wife and a son from each of his marriages.Notes
Persondata
NAME = Thomas, Josiah
ALTERNATIVE NAMES =Australia n politician
SHORT DESCRIPTION =
DATE OF BIRTH =28 April 1863
PLACE OF BIRTH =Camborne ,Cornwall ,England
DATE OF DEATH =5 February 1933
PLACE OF DEATH =Croydon Park, New South Wales
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