The Honourable Sir John-Pearce Luke CMG, MP |
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20th Mayor of Wellington | |
In office 1913–1921 |
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Personal details | |
Born | 16 July 1858 Penzance, Cornwall, United Kingdom |
Died | 13 March 1931 Wellington, New Zealand |
(aged 72)
Political party | Liberal (1908–1918) Reform (1918–1928) |
Sir John-Pearce Luke, CMG (1858–1931) was a New Zealand politician. Luke was Mayor of Wellington from 1913–1921 and Member of Parliament for Wellington Suburbs 1908–1911 and Wellington North 1918–1928. His brother Charles Manley Luke had previously also been Mayor of Wellington in 1895. The Luke brothers were always known by their first two names, although Sir John Pearce was also nicknamed Peanut, because he was short.
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Born at St Just, near Penzance, Cornwall, England, Luke came to New Zealand with his parents in July 1874 after the Cornish tin industry failed. He completed an apprenticeship as an engineer.
Luke was first elected to the city council in 1898 and served between that year and 1911. He was responsible for the expansion of the Wellington tramway system. For many years he was president of the New Zealand Engineers and Iron masters Association, and was actively associated with the Wellington Industrial Association, the Wellington District Hospital Board, the Wellington Technical Education Board, and the Navy League. The Returned Soldiers Association conferred upon them the honour of life membership of the organisation.
His political career began in 1908 with his election as member for Wellington Suburbs for the Liberal Party, but he lost his seat at the 1911 general election to Reform candidate William Henry Dillon Bell. From 1911 until 1918 he was not a member of Parliament, and was re-elected to Parliament in the Wellington North by-election 1918 and again 1919, as the member for Wellington North. He held this seat continuously until the general election of 1928, when he was defeated by the Labour candidate, by a margin of 47 votes.
Luke was married in 1880 to Jacobina McGregor. He was knighted in 1921 for his work in combatting the 1918 influenza epidemic, having previously been made a CMG.
He was leader of the New Zealand delegation which visited South Africa in 1924 in connection with the Empire Parliamentary Association.