Wilfrid Kent Hughes
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Sir Wilfrid Selwyn Kent Hughes, KBE, MVO, MC, (12 June 1895 – 31 July 1970) was an Australian soldier, Olympian and Olympic Games organiser, author and federal and state government minister.
Kent Hughes was born in Melbourne to an upper middle-class family. He was set to attend the University of Oxford on a Rhodes Scholarship when he enlisted in the army on the outbreak of World War I. After his discharge from the army, Kent Hughes attended Oxford and represented Australia in athletics as a hurdler at the 1920 Summer Olympics in Antwerp. Upon the completion of his degree at Oxford, Kent Hughes returned to Australia, seeking a career in politics. Elected to the Victorian state parliament in 1927, Kent Hughes sat with the conservative Nationalist Party of Australia, rising to the position of Deputy Premier of Victoria. Kent Hughes proved to be a controversial figure in politics, and was never afraid to publicly espouse his personal beliefs, such as an admiration for fascism, of which he had a poor understanding.
Kent Hughes re-enlisted in the army at the outbreak of World War II and, while stationed in Singapore, was captured by the Japanese. He spent four years as a Prisoner of war before his liberation by the Red Army in 1945. Kent Hughes returned to Victorian state politics until switching to federal politics in 1949.
He was appointed a Minister in the federal government led by Menzies but complained his responsibilities were trifling. More interesting to him was the chairmanship of the 1956 Summer Olympics Organising Committee, where he showed he was willing to break longstanding Olympic conventions in order to modernise the Games. His role in the organisation of the Melbourne Olympics has led sporting historians to refer to Kent Hughes as "one of the most important figures in Olympic History".[1] Following the Olympics Kent Hughes was dropped from his ministerial posts and spent the remainder of his time in parliament on the backbenches, gaining a reputation as the most ardent anticommunist in parliament. He died aged 75 in 1970, still a member of federal parliament.
Contents |
[edit] History
[edit] Early life
The second child of seven of English orthopaedic surgeon and publisher Wilfred Kent Hughes and his wife Clementina (nee Rankin), Kent Hughes was born in East Melbourne and educated at Trinity Grammar and Melbourne Grammar. He was accepted atOxford University as a Rhodes Scholar in 1914 (although he did not commence study at Oxford until 1919 due to his war service).[2] The family name was Hughes, and young Wilfrid was usually called Bill or Billy. Later, to avoid confusion with fellow politician Billy Hughes, he adopted one of his middle names, Kent, as part of his surname.[3] It is not known why he spelled his given name "Wilfrid" while his father spelled it "Wilfred."
A number of Kent Hughes's relatives also gained national recognition in their chosen fields. Uncle Canon Ernest Hughes was an influential member of the Church of England in Australia and leading Australian rules footballer with St Kilda and Essendon[4] and uncle Frederic Hughes was a Brigadier-General, mayor of St Kilda and Aide-de-camp to the Governor General, the Earl of Dudley.[5] Aunt Eva Hughes OBE founded the Australian Women's National League, the then largest body of organised women in the country,[5] while his sisters Dr Ellen Kent Hughes MBE was a leading paediatrician and community activist[6] and Gwendoline Kent Lloyd, who Wilfrid referred to as "the family Communist",[7] was a renowned proponent of Indigenous rights.[8]
[edit] World War I
Kent Hughes enlisted in the Australian Imperial Forces as a private on 8 August 1914.[9] He served in the 3rd Light Horse Brigade in Gallipoli, where he was wounded,[1] the Sinai, Palestine and Syria. Kent Hughes, who reached the rank of major, was mentioned in dispatches four times, winning the Military Cross in 1917 and appointed Deputy Adjutant and Quartermaster General of the Australian Mounted Division.[10] Upon his return to Australia in 1918 he published a volume of memoirs, Modern Crusaders, about his exploits in the Light Horse Brigade.[7]
[edit] University and 1920 Olympics
At war's end, Kent Hughes entered Christ Church, Oxford as a Rhodes Scholar, gaining a Bachelor of Arts with Honours in Modern History. He also captained the Oxford ski team and showed a proficiency for athletics, such that Kent Hughes was chosen to represent Australia in the 110 and 400 metre hurdles at the 1920 Summer Olympics. He finished fourth in his heat of the 110 metre hurdles and failed to progress but won his 400 metre heat before finishing fifth in the semi final. Kent Hughes did not return to England empty handed, as he later admitted to souveniring an official Olympic flag from the Olympic stadium.[11]
In 1921, Kent Hughes was part of the Oxford Ski Team visit to Europe, during which he became the first Australian to ski competitively overseas.[3]
Following his graduation from Oxford, Kent Hughes married Edith Kerr, a wealthy American heiress to a thread manufacturing empire, on 3 February 1923 in Montclair, New Jersey and returned to Melbourne to work as a director in his father's publishing company Ramsay Publishing Pty Ltd while sizing up a career in politics.[12]
[edit] Political life
In 1926 Kent Hughes unsuccessfully sought Nationalist Party of Australia preselection for the newly created seat of Kew in the Victorian Legislative Assembly before winning the seat as an Independent candidate at the 1927 election, after which he joined the Nationalists.[12] Kent Hughes soon found himself opposed to the conservative establishment and what he considered the mediocrity of Victorian politics. He openly referred to a number of his fellow Nationalists as "boneheads" and opposition Australian Labor Party members as "uncouth, semi-educated ill-mannered narrow-minded boors".[12] Kent Hughes, along with his close friend and ally Robert Menzies, founded the Young Nationalists Organisation in 1929, which became an influential force in conservative politics in Victoria.[13]
When the Nationalists came into power in December 1928, Kent Hughes was appointed Cabinet Secretary and Government Whip but resigned his positions in July 1929, ostensibly in protest over a government subsidy to a freezing works company but more likely in reaction to the ongoing boneheadedness of his fellow parliamentarians.[12]
Following the formation of the United Australia Party (UAP) in place of the Nationalists in 1931, Kent Hughes served in several portfolios, including Railways, Labour, Transport and Sustenance. It was as Minister for Sustenance, a portfolio designed to deal with the poverty of the Great Depression, that he became known as the "Minister for Starvation".[12] Kent Hughes drafted legislation that became the Unemployment Relief (Administration) Bill, which when enacted in January 1933, forced the unemployed to work for the dole and denied any form of financial assistance to women.[14] Kent Hughes's bill has been described as the harshest piece of legislation in Australia directed towards the unemployed during the Depression.[12]
In January 1933 Kent Hughes became embroiled in cricket's Bodyline affair. A friend of English captain Douglas Jardine from their Oxford days, Kent Hughes publicly defended Jardine's tactics of sustained short pitched bowling against the Australian batsmen, arguing that Australia used similar tactics against England during the 1921 Ashes tour. He also criticised the protests of Australian cricket's governing body, the Australian Cricket Board of Control towards Jardine, stating they were "boorish, bitter (and) insulting".[15]
While he was attacking the Cricket Board of Control, Kent Hughes was simultaneously organising the Australian tour of the Duke of Gloucester, and for his efforts was appointed a Member of the Royal Victorian Order in 1934.[3] In 1938 he was manager of the Australian team at the Empire Games held in Sydney.[10]
[edit] "Why I Have Become a Fascist"
During the late 1920s and 1930s Kent Hughes developed a strong sympathy for fascism, encouraged in part by his uncle Ernest, who visited Italy in 1926 and published an enthusiastic report on Mussolini's Italy in a local newspaper on his return.[12] Kent Hughes was also impressed by Sir Oswald Mosley's proposal for a British parliament consisting of business and national interests and headed by a powerful executive government.[12] In 1933 he published a series of articles in the Melbourne Herald, titled "Why I Have Become a Fascist." In one article he wrote that fascism "endeavours to avoid the egotistical attitude of laissez faire and the inertia of socialism." Kent Hughes saw it as "a half-way house between the two systems." In fascist countries, he said, "industrial peace and security have been found to be worth the price of sacrificing some of the individual liberty previously enjoyed." In what he called "British communities," however, he expected that fascism would "be garbed not in the dictatorial black shirt, but in the more sedate style of the British Parliamentary representative."[3]
Kent Hughes was unique among prominent Australians in publicly identifying as a fascist, although he never joined a fascist organisation, took any overt act that could be described as fascist and there is no evidence to suggest he was an anti-semite.[12] His biographer Frederick Howard maintains that Kent Hughes did not know much about fascism and used the word mainly for its shock value. "Kent Hughes does not seem to have paid enough attention to the difference between theory and practice in Mussolini's Italy," he observes.[3]
Kent Hughes's public support of fascism failed to damage his political career, as he was elected Victorian Deputy Leader of the UAP in 1935, serving until his enlistment in the army in 1939.[3]
[edit] World War II
In 1939, without resigning from Parliament, Kent Hughes rejoined the Army, becoming a colonel in the 8th Division. He served in the Malaya campaign of 1942, where he was again mentioned in despatches. Kent Hughes was taken prisoner by the Japanese in Singapore and was kept in the Changi Prisoner Of War camp, where he was beaten and half-starved. In 1943 he was shipped as a slave labourer to Taiwan. In October 1944 he was shipped to Japan and on to Korea, and then sent by rail to Mukden in Manchuria, where prisoners of war were put to work in arms factories. In August 1945 Kent Hughes was liberated by the invading Red Army and returned to Australia with an amoebic complaint that would continue to bother him.[7] While imprisoned, Kent Hughes secretly wrote what became Slaves of the Samurai, a colourful account of his wartime experiences, published in 1946. He also took up the case of Australian General Gordon Bennett, who was accused of cowardice and desertion after leaving Singapore without authorisation shortly before the city surrendered to the Japanese. Kent Hughes appeared before the Royal Commission into Bennett's case, and argued that Bennett was correct to avoid being taken prisoner and return to Australia to continue the fight.[3]
Appointed an OBE in 1947 for his wartime service,[2] Kent Hughes was very popular with the ex-service community, appearing in the ANZAC Day march in April each year on horseback, in his World War I uniform, and campaigning for improved benefits for ex-servicemen, particularly ex-Prisoners Of War.[2]
[edit] Post-war politics
Kent Hughes returned to politics and joined the newly founded Liberal Party. He served as Deputy Premier, Minister for Transport and Minister for Public Instruction from 1947 to 1949, as well as Chief Secretary and Minister for Electrical Undertakings in 1948.[10]
Leaving state politics, in 1949 Kent Hughes stood for the Melbourne based Division of Chisholm, a seat the Liberal Party was expected to win.[16] Subsequently elected, he was appointed Minister for the Interior and Minister for Works and Housing (Minister for Works from June 1952) in the Menzies Government. Kent Hughes complained that he was left in charge of only trifling issues.[7]
[edit] 1956 Olympics
Following the successful bid by Melbourne to host the 1956 Summer Olympics, problems had beset the organising of the Games to the extent that International Olympic Committee President Avery Brundage threatened to award the Games to another city.[17] In response, the Melbourne Organising Committee approached Kent Hughes in 1951 to be its chairman, believing his public stature, Olympian background and experience in administration would be great assets.
Kent Hughes took to the Chairman role with gusto, although his relationship with Brundage was never cordial. During a visit to Melbourne in 1955 to inspect the preparations, Brundage was less than impressed with the progress achieved under Kent Hughes's chairmanship and condemned Kent Hughes's apparent lack of concern at the looming deadline for the Games. Not one to take criticism lightly, Kent Hughes was quoted as saying that he had enough to worry about without having "Chicago blow-ins come out here and blow their tops over nothing in particular and annoy everyone in general."[1]
Kent Hughes broke Olympic tradition in two significant ways. He decided to charge for television and newsreel footage of the Games where previously footage was provided free of charge.[17] Secondly, following a suggestion from John Ian Wing, a 17 year old apprentice carpenter from Melbourne, Kent Hughes instigated the now familiar closing ceremony tradition of the athletes of different nations parading together, instead of with their national teams, as a symbol of world unity.[17] Kent Hughes's plan to charge for television and newsreel footage of the Games was strongly opposed in many circles, including the media, who believed that the Games were news and as such should be free, while Australian government authorities thought that providing free television coverage of the Games would lead to greater tourism opportunities.[1] Brundage made no public comment on television rights for the Games but grasped the financial possibilities of charging for rights, devising a television rights fees policy following the Games, whereby television stations were forced to negotiate for televised rights for all future Games. This policy is believed to have netted the IOC over $12 billion dollars since its inception at the 1960 Summer Olympics.[1]
In recognition of his work successfully organising the Games Kent Hughes was made a Knight Commander of the Order of the British Empire in 1957. An award presented by the Victorian Olympic Council to the athlete it considers to have given the most outstanding performance at a Games is named in his honour[18] and Kent Hughes's significance to the modern Olympic movement is such that it has been suggested that an oil portrait of Kent Hughes be commissioned and placed in the Olympic Museum in Lausanne.[1]
[edit] Political decline
Menzies dropped Kent Hughes from his ministry in 1956, ostensibly because Menzies opposed some of his housing plans for Canberra. However, it was more likely due to Kent Hughes's continued public comments on foreign affairs and defence matters,[19] in which he took an independent line favouring a policy even more anti-Communist than that of Menzies, higher defence spending and the reintroduction of conscription.[3] Widely renowned as the parliamentary figure most knowledgeable in Asian affairs,[19] Kent Hughes was a leading member of the "Taiwan lobby" in the Liberal Party, which sought to maintain the recognition of Taiwan as the official representative of China[20], and met several times with Chiang Kai-shek.[21] He remained a backbench member until his death in 1970. Survived by his wife and three daughters, Kent Hughes was accorded a State Funeral.[7] The Times obituary highlighted his war service and Olympian status, referring to him as "one of the more colourful Australian parliamentarians"[21] while sidestepping his earlier flirtation with fascism.
[edit] References
- ^ a b c d e f Barney, R. & Wenn, S. (2004) "Nothing in Hand but Billions in Precedent", Journal of Olympic History, Vol. 12, No. 1, International Society of Olympic Historians: Cologne.
- ^ a b c Papers of Sir Wilfrid Kent Hughes (1895 - 1970) - MS 4856. Held at the National Library of Australia Accessed 10 June 2006.
- ^ a b c d e f g h Howard, F. (1972) Kent Hughes, Macmillan.
- ^ Harper, N. (1983) "Hughes, Ernest Selwyn (1860 - 1942)" Australian Dictionary of Biography, Vol. 9. Melbourne University Press: Parkdale.
- ^ a b Smart, J. (1983) "Hughes, Frederic Godfrey (1858 - 1944)", Australian Dictionary of Biography, vol. 9. Melbourne University Press: Parkdale.
- ^ Gilbert, L. A. (2000). Kent Hughes, Ellen Mary (1893 - 1979). Australian Dictionary of Biography. Australian National University. Retrieved on 2007-12-12.
- ^ a b c d e Hancock, I. R. (2000). Kent Hughes, Sir Wilfrid Selwyn (1895 - 1970). Australian Dictionary of Biography. Australian National University. Retrieved on 2007-12-12.
- ^ Falk, B. (2000). Lloyd, Gwendolen Kent (Gwenda) (1899 - 1965). Australian Dictionary of Biography. Australian National University. Retrieved on 2007-12-12.
- ^ First World War Nominal Roll. Australian War Memorial. Retrieved on 2007-12-06. (listed third from top)
- ^ a b c Kent Hughes, Sir Wilfrid Selwyn. Parliament of Victoria. Retrieved on 2007-12-05.
- ^ Findling, J. & Pelle, K. (2004) Encyclopedia of the Modern Olympic Movement, Greenwood Press. ISBN 0313322783
- ^ a b c d e f g h i Spenceley, G. (2001) "The minister for starvation": Wilfrid Kent Hughes, fascism and the Unemployment Relief", Labour History, Australian Society for the Study of Labour History. Vol. 81.
- ^ History of the Young Liberal Movement. New South Wales Young Liberals. Retrieved on 2008-02-06.
- ^ Stone, J. (1998) "Brazen Hussies and God's Police", Rebel Women in Australian Working Class History, ed. Bloodworth, S. & O'Lincoln, T. Interventions: Melbourne.
- ^ ________ "The Leg Theory", The Times, London, 20 January 1933, p 6
- ^ Green, A. (2007). Chisholm - Federal Election 2007. Australia Votes 2007. Australian Broadcasting Corporation. Retrieved on 2007-12-06.
- ^ a b c Peterson, D. (1996) "The Games in our times", Daily Telegraph, 13 July 1996, p 36.
- ^ Honour Roll. Victorian Olympic Council. Retrieved on 2007-12-04.
- ^ a b Whitington, D. (1964) The Rulers, Lansdowne Press, Melbourne.
- ^ Hancock, I. (2002) Gorton, Hodder, 67
- ^ a b ________ "Sir W Kent Hughes", The Times, London, 1 August 1970, p 14
[edit] Further reading
- Henderson, G. (1994) Menzies Child: The Liberal Party of Australia 1944-94, Allen & Unwin, St Leonards, NSW. ISBN 1-86373-747-2
Political offices | ||
---|---|---|
Preceded by Eric Harrison |
Minister for the Interior 1951 – 1956 |
Succeeded by Allen Fairhall |
Preceded by Richard Casey |
Minister for Works and Housing Minister for Works 1951 – 1956 |
|
Parliament of Australia | ||
New division | Member for Chisholm 1949 – 1970 |
Succeeded by Tony Staley |