Frederick Holder

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Richard Foster
1st Speaker of the Australian House of Representatives
In office
9 May 1901 – 23 July 1909
Succeeded byCarty Salmon
Personal details
Born(1850-05-12)12 May 1850
Independent
(by 1903, to 1909)
SpouseJulia Maria Stephens

Sir Frederick William Holder

KCMG (12 May 1850 – 23 July 1909) was an Australian politician. He was Premier of South Australia from June to October 1892 and again from 1899 to 1901. He was a prominent member of the inaugural Parliament of Australia following Federation in 1901, and was the first Speaker of the Australian House of Representatives
.

Life

Holder was born in Happy Valley, South Australia, the son of James Morecott Holder and his wife, Martha Breakspear Roby. He was educated at Pulteney Grammar School and St Peter's College, Adelaide before first becoming a teacher, schoolmaster, and Methodist preacher, and later the editor and proprietor of the Burra Record; he also wrote for the Adelaide Register.

Holder married Julia Maria Stephens in 1877. His wife proved to be a great boon to his career, providing political advice and serving as South Australian President of the influential

Women's Christian Temperance Union
.

Speculating that it contributed to his poor health, Holder had failed to seek suitable medical attention following an accident involving a mule in 1899.[1]

South Australian politics

Parliament House portrait of Holder by George A. J. Webb, 1916

With considerable experience as a Councillor and Town Clerk, and just five months after his election as mayor of the Corporate Town of Burra,[2] Holder was elected to the South Australian House of Assembly in 1887 as the member for Burra, and soon gained a sound reputation in parliament. As a result, he served as Treasurer of South Australia from 1889–90 in the J. A. Cockburn ministry, and Leader of the Opposition from 1890–92. He again served as Opposition Leader in 1899. He sat on many royal commissions during his parliamentary career in South Australia, and his reasonableness and sincerity made him a very valuable committee man. In June 1891 he carried a vote of want of confidence in the Playford ministry, and took office as Premier and Treasurer. He had only a small majority and it was a time of great financial difficulties due to a severe drought and Holder was forced out as Premier after just four months.

Holder then served as Commissioner of Public Works in Charles Kingston's government from 1893–94, followed by a third stint as Treasurer from 1894 until his re-election as Premier and Treasurer in late 1899. As Premier, his most notable innovation was to introduce one standard time zone throughout South Australia, while he also played a prominent role in the movement towards a federal union, and, as such, was a member of the Australasian Federal Convention that framed the Commonwealth constitution in 1897–98. He opposed to Convention's decision to transfer postal and telegraphic services to the new Commonwealth.[3]

1898 Australasian Federal Convention
.

Holder took over the liberal leadership from Charles Kingston and was again Premier, this time from 1899 to 1901. He was succeeded in both roles by John Jenkins. The Liberal and Democratic Union would not be formed until the 1906 election.

Federal politics

As Premier, Holder considered himself to be the logical choice for a ministerial position in the new federal cabinet, and was offered a cabinet position by

Lord Hopetoun to form a government and become the inaugural Prime Minister. Holder initially accepted, and was in Melbourne en route to Sydney to officially accept his ministry when he was convinced by Alfred Deakin to refuse Lyne and instead support Edmund Barton's claim to the premiership. Assured by Richard O'Connor, Barton's righthand man, that he would be invited to join the ministry if he supported Barton, Holder was furious when Barton instead chose Kingston. Nonetheless, Holder resigned as Premier to successfully contest the 1901 federal election for the Free Trade Party and entered the new federal parliament in the single statewide Division of South Australia. Elected Speaker of the House of Representatives, Holder followed traditional Westminster convention and resigned from his party upon his elevation as Speaker, and (again in accordance with traditional convention) was re-elected to parliament unopposed as an independent in the 1903 election in the Division of Wakefield. Labor did not observe the convention in the 1906 election, however, and contested the Division of Wakefield, but Holder was re-elected as an independent candidate. As speaker, he largely eschewed partisan politics, guided by the convention that the Speaker of the Westminster Parliament is strictly nonpartisan.[1]

Death

Knighted in 1902, Holder served as Speaker until his death on 23 July 1909. A 14-hour parliamentary session had started the previous afternoon. At 5 am the House was in committee, but Holder was present, having been called to the chamber to receive the committee's report, and was seated on the front bench, next to the Minister for Home Affairs,

cerebral hemorrhage was diagnosed by three members with medical qualifications and a doctor from outside the house. He died at 4:18 pm that same day without having gained consciousness.[4] He was given a state funeral
in Adelaide.

Recognition

Holder Road, in the Adelaide suburb of Hove, was named for him.

The Canberra suburb of Holder was named in his honour when gazetted in 1970.

Family

On 29 March 1877, he married Julia Maria Stephens. She was president of the

Women's Christian Temperance Union in South Australia, and a vice-president of the National Council of Women.[5]
Their family included:

  • Ethel Roby Holder MA (1878– ) student at ASG, became art teacher. She married a Mr Harry of Victoria on 7 July 1908.[6]
  • Rhoda Sims Holder (1880– )
  • Frederick Stephens Holder (1882– )
  • Winifred Breakspeare Holder (1886– )
  • Evan Morecott Holder (1888– )
  • Sydney Ernest Holder (1890– )
  • Ruth Eliza Holder (1892– )
  • Ida Margaret Holder (1894– )

See also

  • First Holder Ministry
  • Second Holder Ministry

Notes

  1. ^ a b Speaker of the House of Representatives, second edition: APH Archived 23 November 2011 at the Wayback Machine
  2. ^ "Burra Municipal Elections". Burra Record (SA : 1878 - 1954). S.A. 23 November 1886. p. 2. Retrieved 26 September 2012 – via Trove.
  3. ^ William Coleman,Their Fiery Cross of Union. A Retelling of the Creation of the Australian Federation, 1889-1914, Connor Court, Queensland, 2021, p.432.
  4. ^ Gavin Souter, Acts of Parliament, 1988, p. 115
  5. ^ Atchley 1912.
  6. ^ "Matrimonial Matters". The Gadfly. Vol. III, no. 126. South Australia. 8 July 1908. p. 10. Retrieved 13 November 2023 – via National Library of Australia.

References

External links

 

South Australian House of Assembly
Preceded by Member for Burra
1887–1901
With: Ben Rounsevell / George Lake / Charles Goode
Succeeded by
Political offices
Preceded by Leader of the Opposition of South Australia
1890–1892
Succeeded by
Preceded by Premier of South Australia
1892
Succeeded by
Vacant
Title last held by
Lawrence Grayson
Commissioner of Public Works
1893–1894
Succeeded by
Preceded by Leader of the Opposition of South Australia
1899
Succeeded by
Preceded by Premier of South Australia
1899–1901
Succeeded by
Parliament of Australia
New parliament Speaker of the Australian House of Representatives
1901–1909
Succeeded by
Member for Division abolished
New division Member for Wakefield
1903–1909
Succeeded by
Richard Foster