Charles Frazer (Australian politician)

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Charles Edward Frazer (2 January 188025 November 1913) was an Australian politician.

Frazer was born in Yarrawonga, Victoria and educated locally until he was fifteen, when he left for Western Australia during its goldrush. He found a job with the Western Australian Government Railways, qualified as a first-class engine driver in 1899 and moved to Boulder, where he worked as a mine-engine driver. He was elected as president of his branch of his union in 1902 and secretary of the Goldfields Trades and Labor Council in 1903. In August 1904 he married Mary Kinnane.[1]

[edit] Political career

In November 1902, Frazer was elected to Kalgoorlie Municipal Council and was elected as the member for Kalgoorlie in the federal parliament at the 1903 election, representing the Australian Labor Party. In parliament, he studied law in order to improve his leadership skills, campaigned successfully for the Labor parliamentary caucus to select the ministry when in office and for Labor to stop supporting Protectionist Party governments. Following Labor's success at the 1910 election, he served as honorary minister in the Second Fisher Ministry and in October 1911 became Postmaster-General. He introduced new stamps, although his one-penny stamp, which "featured a kangaroo 'rampant upon a purely White Australia'" was replaced by the succeeding Cook government. Frazer died unexpectedly from pneumonia in November 1913.[1]

[edit] Notes

Political offices
Preceded by
Josiah Thomas
Postmaster-General
1911–1913
Succeeded by
Agar Wynne
Parliament of Australia
Preceded by
John Kirwan
Member for Kalgoorlie
1903–1913
Succeeded by
Hugh Mahon


Persondata
NAME Frazer, Charles Edward
ALTERNATIVE NAMES
SHORT DESCRIPTION Australian politician
DATE OF BIRTH 2 January 1880
PLACE OF BIRTH Yarrawonga, Victoria
DATE OF DEATH 25 November 1913
PLACE OF DEATH Melbourne