Josiah Thomas (politician)

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Prime MinisterAndrew Fisher
Preceded byLee Batchelor
Succeeded byPaddy Glynn
Prime MinisterAndrew Fisher
Josiah Thomas
Minister for External Affairs
In office
14 October 1911  24 June 1913
Prime MinisterAndrew Fisher
Preceded byLee Batchelor
Succeeded byPaddy Glynn
Postmaster-General of Australia
In office
29 April 1910  14 October 1911
Prime MinisterAndrew Fisher
Preceded byJohn Quick
Succeeded byCharlie Frazer
In office
13 November 1908  2 June 1909
Prime MinisterAndrew Fisher
Preceded bySamuel Mauger
Succeeded byJohn Quick
Senator for New South Wales
In office
14 November 1925  30 June 1929
In office
1 July 1917  30 June 1923
Member of the Australian Parliament
for Barrier
In office
29 March 1901  26 March 1917
Preceded byNew seat
Succeeded byMichael Considine
Member of the New South Wales Parliament
for Alma
In office
17 July 1894  11 June 1901
Preceded byNew seat
Succeeded byWilliam Williams
Personal details
Born(1863-04-28)28 April 1863
Camborne, Cornwall, England
Died5 February 1933(1933-02-05) (aged 69)
PartyLabor (to 1917)
Nationalist (from 1917)
Spouses
Henrietta Ingleby
(m. 18891901)
Clara Ingleby
(m. 1909)
OccupationMiner, trade unionist
Signature
From left: Minister Josiah Thomas, Sir Walter Barttelot and Administrator John Gilruth.

Josiah Thomas (28 April 1863 – 5 February 1933) was an Australian politician. He was elected to the House of Representatives at the inaugural 1901 federal election, representing the Labor Party. Thomas served as a minister in Andrew Fisher's first two governments, as Postmaster-General (1908–1909, 1910–1911) and Minister for External Affairs (1911–1913). He joined the Nationalist Party after the 1916 Labor split and transferred to the Senate at the 1917 election, serving as a Senator for New South Wales from 1917 to 1923 and from 1925 to 1929.

Thomas was born in Camborne, Cornwall, England, the son of Josiah Thomas Sr. and Ann Rablin. He went to Mexico as a child with his father, a mine manager, 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.[1][2]

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 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 a New South Wales Legislative Assembly inquiry into lead poisoning at the mines in 1892.[1]

New South Wales politics

Thomas was elected as the Labor Party member for Alma, covering part of Broken Hill in the Legislative Assembly in 1894,[2] where he campaigned for improvements to workplace health and safety. He opposed the bills for the federation of Australia because he considered their referendums provisions inadequate.[1]

Federal politics

Personal life

Notes

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