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Alfred Hindmarsh

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
New Zealand politician, lawyer and unionist

Alfred Hindmarsh
1stLeader of the Labour Party
In office
7 July 1916 – 13 November 1918
Succeeded byHarry Holland
Member of theNew Zealand Parliament
forWellington South
In office
14 December 1911 – 13 November 1918
Preceded byRobert Wright
Succeeded byBob Semple
Member of theWellington City Council
In office
27 April 1905 – 8 May 1915
ConstituencyAt-large
Personal details
Born(1860-04-18)18 April 1860
Port Elliot,South Australia,Australia
Died13 November 1918(1918-11-13) (aged 58)
Wellington, New Zealand
Political partyLabour
Other political
affiliations
United Labour (1912–16)
Labour (1910–12)
IPLL (1904–10)
Spouse
Winifred Taylor
(m. 1892⁠–⁠1916)
RelationsJohn Hindmarsh (grandfather)
Children4
ProfessionLawyer

Alfred Humphrey Hindmarsh (18 April 1860 – 13 November 1918) was aNew Zealandpolitician,lawyer, and unionist. He died in the1918 influenza epidemic. He served as the first leader of the modernNew Zealand Labour Party.

Early life

[edit]

Hindmarsh was born inPort Elliot,Australia, and was the grandson of Rear-AdmiralJohn Hindmarsh, the firstGovernor of South Australia. His grandfather was recalled to England in 1838, but his father, also named John Hindmarsh, returned toSouth Australia and worked as a lawyer. Alfred Hindmarsh lost his mother when he was ten, and his father remarried. He was educated atSt Peter's College inAdelaide.[1]

The family moved toNapier, New Zealand, in 1878. Hindmarsh trained as alawyer inDunedin and wasadmitted to the bar in 1891, when he briefly worked inChristchurch at the Supreme Court (since renamed theHigh Court). He settled inWellington, living in Derwent Street, Island Bay.[2] While living there, he married Winifred Taylor on 3 October 1892.[1]

Taylor was his Irish housekeeper and the decision raised eyebrows among his relatives, considering her "under his station". The two had a loving relationship and Hindmarsh regarded the decision as reaffirming the rejection of the class system he was fighting against.[3]

Early career

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Politically, Hindmarsh was left-wing (though his contemporaries never described him as being a truesocialist) and held a number of positions in the local labour movement.

Most notably, he headed the Wellington branch of the Seamen's Union during the internal disputes of the 1890s. In this role, he argued against the traditional alignment of unions with the governingLiberal Party, instead advocating an independent labour voice in Parliament.

In1901, Hindmarsh himself stood for theWellington City Council but was unsuccessful, coming in third to last with only 2,028 votes.[4]

However, in1905, backed by the newIndependent Political Labour League (IPLL), which he had helped found, he was elected. He remained a city councillor until 1915. Between 1906 and 1907, he served as the League's president.[1]

In 1911, he was first elected to theWellington Harbour Board as a representative of the Wellington City constituency.[5]

Member of Parliament

[edit]
See also:Electoral history of Alfred Hindmarsh
New Zealand Parliament
YearsTermElectorateParty
1911–191218thWellington SouthLabour
1912–1914Changed allegiance to:United Labour
1914–191619thWellington SouthUnited Labour
1916–1918Changed allegiance to:Labour

In the1905 general election, Hindmarsh stood as an IPLL candidate for Parliament in theNewtown electorate. Of the four candidates, he came a distant last.[6] In the1911 general election, he was elected inWellington South as a candidate for theoriginal Labour Party in the second ballot.[7] Hindmarsh was one of four Labour candidates elected in 1911, he was assisted in his campaign in Wellington South by two future Labour MPs,Jim Thorn andWalter Nash who were delighted at the party's success.[8]

In the following year, 1912, the party was relaunched as theUnited Labour Party, with Hindmarsh still a member. In 1913, the United Labour Party itself agreed to merge with theSocialist Party to form theSocial Democratic Party, but Hindmarsh believed that the resulting party would be too extreme. Hindmarsh chose became one of a group of United Labour loyalists who remained outside the Social Democrats, forming a loosely organised "remnant" faction.

In July 1915, when the Social Democrats and the United Labour remnant (along with a labour-aligned independent) agreed to form a united caucus, Hindmarsh was selected as the groups chairman.[9] One month later anational coalition government was established in response to the severity ofWorld War I. The leader of the Liberal Party, SirJoseph Ward, invited Hindmarsh to be a member of the cabinet (potentially asMinister of Justice) in the national ministry as the representative of the Labour Party. However, Hindmarsh declined the offer and the Labour caucus decided to maintain its independence by not joining the national ministry.[10] With Ward joining the national ministry asMinister of Finance and the Liberal Party being now part of the government this left Labour as the largest party not in government. Contrary to convention Hindmarsh was not officially recognised as theLeader of the Opposition with Ward still retaining the title, albeit in name only.[11]

In July 1916, most of the caucus agreed to establish the modernLabour Party — Hindmarsh was chosen to remain the new party's parliamentary leader during its period of establishment, a position he held until his death.[12] While occupying the position of chairman, Hindmarsh was noted to be a man of great personal attraction and was easily able to establish friendships, even when differing opinions were concerned.[13] This was of great benefit in his position as the recently formed Labour Party had many individuals with both differing personalities and clashing ideas. The addition of more radical Labour MPs likeHarry Holland andPeter Fraser to the caucus (both via by-elections in 1918) Hindmarsh's ability to manage Labour's MPs became more difficult, admitting that he found the pair to be "wild-eyed". This led to speculation he may have fallen out with them as time went on.[14]

One of the largest policy disagreements he had with more radical Labour MPs was conscription. Hindmarsh differed from most of his party colleagues by not opposing conscription and two of his sons fought in the war. He clarified his stance by stating "I do not object to conscription... [but] the State has a duty to the individual".[15] When Labour MPPaddy Webb was arrested in May 1917 for sedition, by making an anti-conscription speech at a West Coast coal mine, there was speculation that the pro-conscription Hindmarsh might also be apprehended merely by association to Webb. Though this was not to be the case.[16]

Death

[edit]

Winifred Hindmarsh died in 1916.[1] Alfred Hindmarsh died in Wellington in office on 13 November 1918 in theinfluenza epidemic of 1918.[7] He was survived by four children.[1] His eight-year-old son Tom went to the Star of the Sea orphanage in Miramar, but on weekends he was cared for by his 14-year-old sister Sybil.[3]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^abcdeTaylor, Kerry."Hindmarsh, Alfred Humphrey - Biography".Dictionary of New Zealand Biography.Ministry for Culture and Heritage. Retrieved23 December 2011.
  2. ^Monk, Arielle (28 August 2013)."From dirt track to trendy street".Stuff. Retrieved12 December 2015.
  3. ^abHindmarsh, Gerard (17 October 2020)."Pity the party who forgets its roots".Stuff. Retrieved18 October 2020.
  4. ^"Wellington City Council".The Free Lance. Vol. I, no. 43. 27 April 1901. p. 11. Retrieved11 March 2016.
  5. ^Johnson, David (1996). "Members and Officers of the Wellington Harbour Board, Appendix I".Wellington Harbour. Wellington Maritime Museum Trust. p. 477.ISBN 0958349800.
  6. ^"The General Election, 1905". National Library. 1906. p. 3. Retrieved8 February 2012.
  7. ^abScholefield, Guy (1950) [First ed. published 1913].New Zealand Parliamentary Record, 1840–1949 (3rd ed.). Wellington: Govt. Printer. p. 113.
  8. ^Sinclair 1976, p. 23.
  9. ^"A Separate Identity".The Sun. Vol. II, no. 438. 6 July 1915. p. 11. Retrieved30 March 2016.
  10. ^"National Cabinet - Personnel Still Unknown".The Evening Post. Vol. XC, no. 31. 5 August 1915. p. 8.
  11. ^Bassett, Michael."Ward, Joseph George".Dictionary of New Zealand Biography.Ministry for Culture and Heritage. Retrieved26 November 2011.
  12. ^"Obituary".Ashburton Guardian. Vol. XXXIX, no. 9451. 14 November 1918. p. 8. Retrieved30 March 2016.
  13. ^Paul 1946, p. 70.
  14. ^Bassett & King 2000, pp. 87.
  15. ^Gustafson 1980, pp. 112.
  16. ^Bassett & King 2000, pp. 78.

References

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