Herbert vere evatt biography of martin garrix
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He was first president of Australia’s Atomic Energy Commission in 1946. On his good days he continued to figure as an impressive libertarian. At first he supported conscription, but grew disenchanted with the 'Yes' arguments in the referendum of 1917.
With Lang's overthrow in 1939, a return to politics was feasible. That month Menzies secured a double dissolution. Chifley died in June and Evatt was unanimously elected to succeed him.
The Menzies government responded to its defeat in the High Court by proposing a referendum giving the Commonwealth power to deal with communism.
It remains a paradox that the man who was Australia's most creative and innovative foreign minister, with an impressive, though uneven, record as a libertarian jurist, should have alienated so many through his deficiencies in personal relations and his incapacity for teamwork.
Select Bibliography
- Dictionary of National Biography, 1961-70
- A.
Following vehement Opposition hostility, the referendum was lost. He also accepted a concept of domestic jurisdiction compatible with Australia's policies on immigration and towards the Aborigines.
While Evatt was returning to Australia in July 1945, Curtin died. Australian Labour Leader (1940) was probably Evatt's finest work, a perceptive and sympathetic tribute to a hero of his youth W.
A. Holman. By enabling the U.N. to develop in its early years as a forum whose outcomes were not always predictable, Evatt's Australia may have helped to secure legitimacy for the new organization, and perhaps allowed the U.N. to act as a force for restraint in the Cold War.
Evatt participated tirelessly. Buckley, B. Dale and W.
Reynolds, Doc Evatt (Melb, 1994)
- Historical Studies, 18, no 73, Oct 1979, p 546, 22, no 89, Oct 1987, p 587
- Australian Journal of Politics and History, 38, no 3, 1992, p 316
- Evatt papers (Flinders University Library).
- Evatt, Mary Alice (wife)
- Carrodus, Peter Rutherford (son-in-law)
- Evatt, Raymond Scott (brother)
- Evatt, Francis Septimus (brother)
- Evatt, Clive Raleigh (brother)
- Burgmann, Ernest Henry (friend)
- Croft, Gwendoline Mary (friend)
- Warnecke, Glen William (friend)
- Reed, John Harford (friend)
- Reed, Lelda Sunday (friend)
- Elkin, Adolphus Peter (classmate)
- Pollard, Reginald Thomas (work colleague)
- Phillips, Philip David (work colleague)
- Watt, Alan Stewart (work colleague)
- Miller, Eric Stanislaus (work colleague)
- Hasluck, Paul Meernaa (work colleague)
- McIntyre, Laurence Rupert (work colleague)
- Burton, John Wear (work colleague)
- Dexter, David St Alban (work colleague)
- Plimsoll, James (work colleague)
- Dunn, Mary Anne (colleague)
- Conroy, Fergus (colleague)
- McTiernan, Edward Aloysius (colleague)
- Landa, Abram (colleague)
- Daly, Fred (colleague)
- Whitlam, Gough (colleague)
- Quantrill, William Joseph (acquaintance)
- Johnson, Jacob (acquaintance)
- Minogue, John Patrick (acquaintance)
- Portus, John Hereford (acquaintance)
- Newton, Maxwell (associate)
- Nadpur, Fred (supported)
- Stone, Julius (influence)
- Sawer, Geoffrey (influenced)
- Kerr, John Robert (influenced)
- McLeay, John (political adversary)
- Cameron, Archie Galbraith (political adversary)
- Santamaria, Bartholomew Augustine (political adversary)
- Aubin, Edward (client)
- Tennant, Kylie (author)
- Holman, William Arthur (subject)
- Dunstan, Don (related entry)
- Forsyth, William Douglass (public servant)
Citation details
G.
His memory faltered and his habits became increasingly erratic. A discerning and influential patron of modern art, he supported the Contemporary Art Society and collected extensively—he and his wife may have been the first Australians to own a Modigliani. Yet, his isolation can be exaggerated. Instead, he launched himself into one of his most vigorous barnstorming campaigns, stumping the country for a 'No' vote in defiance of public opinion polls which forecast majorities of between 70 and 80 per cent in favour of the proposal.
It has been called his finest hour. On 15 August the war in the Pacific ended. His record over civil liberties was chequered. To his staff he was frequently demanding, hectoring and inconsiderate, but capable of unexpected flashes of empathy. Confident of his ability to master complex issues quickly, he was apt to display a poor tactical sense in promoting the Labor government'spolicies.
The honeymoon was spent in Hawaii and California where Evatt conducted an inquiry for the Commonwealth government into American treatment of Asian minorities. The need for planes for the Royal Australian Air Force continued, and in April 1943 Evatt was dispatched on another mission to the U.S.A. The offer was spurned and Labor was once more soundly beaten.