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Tiberius with a Telephone

Page 75

by Patrick Mullins


  I thank those who helped facilitate this work through advice, interviews, answers to queries, correspondence, and permissions. These include the Hon. John Howard, David Joliffe, Tony Stephens, Dianne Davis, Robert Macklin, Richard Farmer, Bruce MacCarthy, Leanne MacCarthy, the Hon. Sir John Carrick, the Hon. Tom Hughes QC, the Hon. Doug Anthony, David Bowman, Margarita Bowman, Ian Hancock, Richard Smart, Michael Morton-Evans, Prof. Cameron Hazlehurst, Phillip Adams, Sir Eric McClintock, Sir Peter Lawler, Tony Eggleton, the family of Frederick Osborne, the family of Alan Reid, John Stone, Prof. Jacques E.C. Hyman, Alan Wright, Lorna Wright, Peter Samuel, C.R. ‘Kim’ Jones, the Hon. Neil Brown QC, Dr David Solomon, Mungo MacCallum, Nicholas Hasluck, Rob Ashley, Bob Bowker, the Sydney Grammar School Archives, the Whiddon Group, Alan Ramsey, Richard Woolcott, Sir Lenox Hewitt, Eric Bogle, Ian Grigg, Jonathan Gaul, Stephen Holt, Reg MacDonald, and Fr Paul Smithers.

  I gratefully acknowledge the support of the Centre for Creative and Cultural Research at the University of Canberra, and the Australian Prime Ministers Centre, at the Museum of Australian Democracy. The award of fellowships from both of these institutions was invaluable to the early stages of my research on McMahon. The museum also generously provided funds for the compilation of the index, for which I thank them. In turn, I thank Mei Yen Chua for compiling the index.

  This biography was in no small way prompted and encouraged by the award of the 2015 Scribe Nonfiction Prize for Young Writers. I am therefore very grateful for the support and advice offered by Julia Carlomagno, then at Scribe, in response to the proposal for this book. I am also profoundly grateful to Henry Rosenbloom, Scribe’s publisher and this book’s editor. Henry has generously supported this book, even though it is unlikely to make him any money, and in doing so has given me the benefit of his experience and sharp eye: I thank him.

  Professor Tom Sheridan read a draft of chapter eight and offered perceptive comments: I thank him. Professor Matthew Ricketson offered wisdom, encouragement, and guidance throughout this work, proving once again his abundant generosity. Ian Hancock read the manuscript in draft form and provided much encouragement and suggestions. John Nethercote, adjunct professor, Canberra campus, Australian Catholic University, made a significant contribution: he read the manuscript and offered encouragement, valuable comments, suggestions, and corrections.

  My siblings and extended family, whose good humour has always sustained me, have been wonderful throughout. My wife, Kate, in putting up with this endeavour over years and several continents, has been my rock: without her, nothing is possible. My parents, for their love and support, have never wavered: thank you.

  Appendix

  McMahon government cabinet and ministry,

  11 March 1971–5 December 1972

  Cabinet

  Prime Minister

  William McMahon

  Minister for Trade and Industry

  Doug Anthony

  Treasurer

  Les Bury*

  Billy Snedden**

  Minister for Primary Industry

  Ian Sinclair

  Minister for Health

  Jim Forbes*

  Sen. Ivor Greenwood (22 March 1972–2 August 1971)

  Sen. Kenneth Anderson***

  Minister for National Development

  Reginald Swartz

  Minister for Foreign Affairs

  William McMahon*

  Les Bury (22 March 1971–2 August 1971)

  Nigel Bowen***

  Minister for Defence

  John Gorton†

  David Fairbairn††

  Postmaster-General; Vice president of the Executive Council; Minister administering the Department of Vice president of the Executive Council (until 30 May 1971)

  Alan Hulme

  Minister for Shipping and Transport

  Peter Nixon

  Minister for Labour and National Service

  Billy Snedden*

  Phillip Lynch**

  Minister for Education and Science

  Nigel Bowen*

  David Fairbairn (22 March 1971–20 August 1971)

  Malcolm Fraser†††

  Outer Ministry

  Minister for Air

  Sen. Thomas Drake-Brockman

  Minister for Immigration

  Phillip Lynch*

  Jim Forbes**

  Minister for Social Services

  William Wentworth

  Minister for Works

  Sen. Reginald Wright

  Minister for Civil Aviation

  Sen. Robert Cotton

  Minister for Customs and Excise

  Don Chipp

  Minister for Repatriation and Minister assisting the Minister for Trade and Industry

  Rendle Holten

  Minister for External Territories

  C.E. Barnes‡

  Andrew Peacock‡‡

  Minister for the Interior

  Ralph Hunt

  Attorney-General

  Tom Hughes*

  Nigel Bowen (22 March 1971–2 August 1971)

  Sen. Ivor Greenwood***

  Minister for the Navy

  Jim Killen*

  Malcolm Mackay**

  Minister for Housing

  Sen. Annabelle Rankin*

  Kevin Cairns**

  Minister for the Environment, Aborigines and the Arts, Minister-in-charge of Tourist Activities (from 31 March 1972)

  Peter Howson

  Minister for Supply

  Sen. Kenneth Anderson‡‡‡

  Victor Garland***

  Minister for the Army

  Andrew Peacock§

  Robert Katter‡‡

  Assistant Ministers and Ministers Assisting

  Minister in charge of Aboriginal Affairs under the Prime Minister

  William Wentworth§§

  Minister assisting the Prime Minister

  Andrew Peacock§§§

  Assistant Minister assisting the Prime Minister

  Don Dobie†††

  Minister in charge of Tourist Activities under the Minister for Trade and Industry

  Sen. Reginald Wright§§

  Minister assisting the Minister for Trade and Industry

  Rendle Holten†††

  Assisting Minister assisting the Minister for Prim
ary Industry

  Robert King¶

  Assistant Minister assisting the Postmaster-General

  Ian Robinson†††

  Minister assisting the Treasurer

  Phillip Lynch*

  Andrew Peacock (27 May 1971–2 February 1972)

  Victor Garland¶¶

  Minister assisting the Minister for National Development

  Don Chipp¶¶¶

  Assistant Minister assisting the Minister for Labour and National Service

  Tony Street†††

  Assistant Minister assisting the Minister for Health

  Sen. John Marriott¥

  Assistant Minister assisting the Minister for Civil Aviation

  John McLeay†††

  * until 22 March 1971

  ** from 22 March 1971

  *** from 2 August 1971

  †until 13 August 1971

  ††from 13 August 1971

  †††from 20 August 1971

  ‡until 25 January 1972

  ‡‡from 2 February 1972

  ‡‡‡until 2 August 1971

  §until 2 February 1972

  §§until 31 May 1972

  §§§until 27 May 1972

  ¶from 5 October 1971

  ¶¶from 21 March 1972

  ¶¶¶from 27 May 1971

  ¥from 14 September 1971

  Abbreviations

  AAEC Australian Atomic Energy Commission

  ABC Australian Broadcasting Commission

  ACP Australian Consolidated Press

  ACT Australian Capital Territory

  ACTU Australian Council of Trade Unions

  AFR Australian Financial Review

  AIDC Australian Industry Development Corporation

  AIF Australian Imperial Force

  ALP Australian Labor Party

  AMA Australian Medical Association

  ANU Australian National University

  ANZUS Australia–New Zealand–United States (Security Treaty)

  ARDB Australian Resources Development Bank

  ARU Australian Rugby Union

  ASIA Australian Stevedoring Industry Authority

  ASIO Australian Security Intelligence Organisation

  ATN Amalgamated Television Networks

  AG Attorney-General

  BIG Basic Industries Group

  CAA Council for Aboriginal Affairs

  CHOGM Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting

  CP Country Party of Australia

  CPD Commonwealth Parliamentary Debates

  CSR Colonial Sugar Refinery

  DLP Democratic Labor Party

  DT Daily Telegraph

  GATT General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade

  GCMG Knight Grand Cross of the Most Distinguished Order of Saint Michael and Saint George

  GG Governor-General

  HMAS Her Majesty’s Australian Ship

  HoR House of Representatives

  IAEA International Atomic Energy Agency

  ILO International Labour Organization

  IMF International Monetary Fund

  IPEC Interstate Parcel Express Company

  JETRO Japanese External Trade Organisation

  JIO Joint Intelligence Organisation

  LP Liberal Party of Australia

  MiG Mikoyan-and-Gurevich designed Soviet fighter aircraft

  MLA Member of the Legislative Assembly

  MLC Member of the Legislative Council

  MLC Mutual Life and Citizens’ Assurance Co.

  MoAD Museum of Australian Democracy

  MP Member of Parliament

  MVD Russia Ministry of State Security

  NAA National Archives of Australia

  NFSA National Film and Sound Archive

  NLA National Library of Australia

  NSW New South Wales

  OECD Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development

  OPEC Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries

  P&O Peninsular and Oriental Steam Navigation Company

  PIR Pacific Islands Regiment

  PM Prime Minister

  PMO Prime Minister’s Office

  PNG Papua New Guinea

  PRC Peoples’ Republic of China

  QC Queen’s Counsel

  RAAF Royal Australian Air Force

  RAN Royal Australian Navy

  ROC Republic of China (Taiwan)

  RSL Returned Services League

  SEATO Southeast Asia Treaty Organization

  Sen. Senate

  SMH Sydney Morning Herald

  UAP United Australia Party

  UK United Kingdom

  UN United Nations

  USA United States of America

  USSR Union of Soviet Socialist Republics

  VIP Very Important Person

  WWF Waterside Workers Federation of Australia

  Notes

  Chapter 1: End to End

  With the exception of the 1961 election, Lowe had been a safe Liberal seat for much of McMahon’s career. In the late 1970s and early 1980s, however, demographic changes and redistributions had made it far more marginal.

  Peter Rees, ‘McMahon quits in protest’, Sun, 5 January 1982, p. 2.

  Reynolds, 2005, pp. 16–17.

  Reid, 1917; Menzies, 1967, p. 2; Hughes, 1947, p. v.

  Mark Hayne, ‘The autobiography that never was’, SMH, 11 April 1988, p. 15.

  Hughes, for example, had written: ‘About what was said — and who said it — I shall say nothing, for in the nature of things all was (and as far as I am concerned will remain) highly confidential.’ See Hughes, 1947, pp. 153–54.

  Hugh Crawford, ‘My one regret’, Herald, 5 January 1982, p. 4.

  ibid.

  Edited by an uncredited Dale Dowse, Helen Shepherd, and Germanus Pause, the book was published in mid-1972 as a send-up of McMahon and a parody of Mao Tse-Tung’s Little Red Book. See ‘McMahon authors own up’, DT, 5 October 1972, p. 7.

  Author’s interview with Michael Morton–Evans, 27 September 2016.

  ibid.

  Author’s interview with Richard Smart, 24 August 2016. Morton-Evans wrote to McMahon on 20 August 1983 to tell him that William Collins was interested in the project.

  Chapter 2 : Building Character

  Biographical information on James ‘Butty’ McMahon is drawn from: ‘A Self-Made Man: the story of Mr “Jimmy” McMahon’, ACL, 1 August 1906, pp. 21–23; ‘Death of Mr James McMahon’, SMH, 18 November 1914, p. 8; ‘Carrier King: the life story of Mr James McMahon’, SW, 10 May 1914, p. 1; CP, 19 November 1914, p. 23; ‘The late Mr James McMahon’, The Newsletter, 28 November 1914, p. 4; ‘Died last week “Butty” McMahon’, Bulletin, 26 November 1914, p. 16; and Anthony Norman, 2005, ‘McMahon, James (Jimmy)(1838–1914)’, ADB, supp. vol., Melbourne University Press. See also ADB file on James McMahon, Noel Butlin Archives, ANU, AU ANUA 312–6239. Unless otherwise noted, ‘Butty’ McMahon quotes are drawn from ‘A Self-Made Man: the story of Mr “Jimmy” McMahon’, ACL, 1 August 1906, pp. 21–23.

  ‘Scene at McMahon’s yard’, SMH, 16 September 1890, p. 5.

  Alan Stewart, ‘Oh darlings, said the PM, you’ll get me into trouble when your mother comes home’, Herald, 3 April 1971, pp. 27–28.

  See birth certificates, New South Wales State Archives: James McMahon (3284/1865), Agnes McMahon (3474/1868), John McMahon (4933/1873), William Daniel McMahon (5295/1875), James Thomas McMahon (5356/1
877), Daniel Ernest McMahon (6647/1879), and Patrick Joseph McMahon (6646/1879); ‘“Smiths’s” personalities—no. 102: wants a wharf laborers’ tariff’, Smiths Weekly, 17 May 1920, p. 4.

  ‘The late Mr James McMahon’, Newsletter, 28 November 1914, p. 4.

  ‘Death of WD McMahon’, Referee, 20 October 1926, p. 20.

  Peter Coleman, ‘Bill McMahon: from “Christus Veritas” to the Department of Labour’, Bulletin, 10 August 1963, p. 17; Oakes and Solomon, 1973, p. 66; and WD McMahon and ME Walder marriage certificate, New South Wales State Archives, 5381/1903.

  Peter Spearitt, 1990, ‘Walder, Sir Samuel Robert (1879–1946)’, ADB, vol. 12, Melbourne University Press; see also notes from T.D. Mutch, An Account of the Family of William Walder, contained in ‘Walder, Sir Samuel Robert’, ADB file, ANUA 312/697, Noel Butlin Archives, Canberra.

  For information on James McMahon, see ‘Death of Mr James McMahon’, SMH, 18 November 1914, p. 8, and ‘Wants a wharf laborers’ tariffs’, SW, 17 May 1920, p. 4; for information on William Daniel’s career as a referee, see Referee, 11 September 1907, p. 10; Referee, 4 August 1909, p. 10; SSM, 28 July 1909, p. 2; Arrow, 21 August 1909, pp. 2–3; Arrow, 20 September 1920, pp. 8–9, and ‘Death of WD McMahon’, Referee, 20 October 1926, p. 20.

 

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