John Earle (Australian politician)

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John Earle (Born Bridgewater, Tasmania November 15, 1865; Died Kettering, Tasmania, February 6, 1932) was an Australian politician and the first Labor Premier of Tasmania.

Earle was born at Bridgewater, Tasmania. Leaving his father's farm at the age of 17 he obtained employment at Kennedy's foundry, Hobart, attended a night school and obtained some knowledge of mechanical engineering. Earle first worked as a blacksmith’s apprentice and then as a tin-miner and prospector. He went to Zeehan in 1891, and stayed for several years until attracted by the Corinna gold-rush. Returning to Zeehan about 1898 he was elected president of the Amalgamated Miners' Association of Victoria and Tasmania, and represented this association at several annual conferences. He was also a member of the local council and chairman of the hospital board. In 1903 he stood for Waratah in an election for the house of assembly, but was defeated by three votes.

After an active career as an organiser for the union, Earle helped found the Tasmanian Workers’ Political League (forerunner to the Australian Labor Party) in 1903, becoming the organisation’s first president. Earle entered the Tasmanian House of Assembly in 1906 and led the first Tasmanian Labor government into office in 1909; a minority government which lasted a week. He returned to office as Premier and Attorney-General in 1914, serving until his defeat at the polls in 1916. While leader of the opposition Earle addressed meetings in favour of conscription and was expelled from the labour party.

In March 1917 he was elected by the Tasmanian parliament to fill a vacancy in the senate, and at the 1917 election he was a nationalist candidate and was returned as one of the Tasmanian senators. He became vice-president of the executive council in the Hughes ministry from December 1921 to February 1923. He was defeated at the senate election held in December 1922, and again in 1926, as a nationalist candidate. In 1928 he stood for the house of assembly as an independent candidate at his old constituency, but was again unsuccessful. He died at Kettering, Tasmania, on 6 February 1932. He left a widow but there were no children.


Earle's cousin Alicia O'Shea Petersen was a prominent suffragist in Tasmania.

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Preceded by
Elliott Lewis
Premier of Tasmania
1909
Succeeded by
Elliott Lewis
Preceded by
Albert Solomon
Premier of Tasmania
1914-1916
Succeeded by
Sir Walter Lee


Premiers of Tasmania
Champ | Gregson | Weston | Smith | Chapman | Whyte | Dry | Wilson | Innes | Kennerley | Reibey | Fysh | Giblin | Crowther | Douglas | Agnew | Dobson | Braddon | E. Lewis | Propsting | Evans | Earle | Solomon | Lee | Hayes | Lyons | McPhee | Ogilvie | Dwyer-Gray | Cosgrove | Brooker | Reece | Bethune | Neilson | Lowe | Holgate | Gray | Field | Groom | Rundle | Bacon | Lennon