Archibald Peake

Archibald Henry Peake (15 January 1859 6 April 1920) was an Australian politician. He was Premier of South Australia on three occasions: from 1909 to 1910 for the Liberal and Democratic Union, and from 1912 to 1915 and 1917 to 1920 for its successor, the Liberal Union. He had also been Treasurer and Attorney-General in the Price-Peake coalition government from 1905 to 1909.[1]

Archibald Peake
25th Premier of South Australia
In office
5 June 1909  3 June 1910
MonarchsEdward VII
George V
GovernorSir Day Bosanquet
Preceded byThomas Price
Succeeded byJohn Verran
In office
17 February 1912  3 April 1915
MonarchGeorge V
GovernorSir Day Bosanquet
Sir Henry Galway
Preceded byJohn Verran
Succeeded byCrawford Vaughan
In office
14 July 1917  6 April 1920
MonarchGeorge V
GovernorSir Henry Galway
Preceded byCrawford Vaughan
Succeeded byHenry Barwell
Leader of the Opposition in South Australia
In office
3 June 1910  17 February 1912
Preceded byJohn Verran
Succeeded byJohn Verran
In office
3 April 1915  14 July 1917
Preceded byCrawford Vaughan
Succeeded byCrawford Vaughan
Member of the South Australian
House of Assembly
In office
22 May 1897  6 April 1920
ConstituencyAlbert (18971902)
Victoria and Albert (19021915)
Alexandra (19151920)
Personal details
Born
Archibald Henry Peake

(1859-01-15)15 January 1859
Chelsea, London, United Kingdom
Died6 April 1920(1920-04-06) (aged 61)
Adelaide, South Australia, Australia
Political partyLiberal and Democratic Union,
Liberal Union
Independent

Early life and career

Peake's family migrated from Chelsea, London in 1862, initially settled in Victoria, before moving to South Australia two years later. Peake was educated at state schools under his father, but in later life widened his education by studying in English history and literature. He entered the service of the District Council of Naracoorte, became district clerk in 1878. In 1893 he contested Albert in an election for the House of Assembly and was beaten by 50 votes, but four years later won the seat by two votes. He resigned his position as district clerk when he entered politics, and afterward was in business at Mount Barker as a member of the firm of auctioneers, Monks and Peake.

Parliamentarian

Price Ministry, c. 1905

Peake was elected to the South Australian House of Assembly as the Member for Albert[1] representing Naracoorte. After his election, Peake was at first an independent supporting the Liberal Governments of Charles Kingston and Frederick Holder. He became disillusioned with the Government of John Jenkins leading him to become leader of a group of 15 members under the Liberal banner.

Peake was elected as one of three members for the new seat of Victoria and Albert in May 1902, he held this seat until March 1915.[2] At the 1905 election Peake sought a Liberal-Labor alliance: 'the only difference between us is a difference of degree and of speed'. Peake's group entered into a coalition with the Labor minority government of Thomas Price, the Price-Peake administration, holding the positions of Treasurer of South Australia and Attorney-General of South Australia. As Treasurer, he delivered three surplus budgets in a row as agricultural conditions improved.

At the 1906 election, Labor came close to a majority in their own right. However, Peake and his party resisted a change to the arrangements and it was only his good relationships with Price that held the coalition together. Peake had formed the Liberal and Democratic Union (LDU) which had a network of branches in 1906.

Premier

After Price's death, the Labor Party demanded the Premier position for its new leader John Verran. Peake refused and was able to form a Government which lasted for a year. The LDU relied on support from the two independent conservative parties, the Australasian National League (formerly National Defence League) and the Farmers and Producers Political Union with representatives of both parties joining the Government.

Labor was victorious, forming South Australia's first majority government at the 1910 election. In the same year, the LDU merged with the two independent conservative parties to form the Liberal Union under Peake's leadership. The parties readily approved the merger, however the LDU which salvaged the fewest of their principles from the merger were more hesitant. Peake persuaded a party conference that 'the day of the middle party is passed', and approved the merger by just one vote. The Liberal Union was affiliated with the federal Commonwealth Liberal Party. Peake was elected as Premier at the 1912 election as Verran's Government had been unable to deal with a number of significant industrial disputes.

Peake's Government created the Industrial arbitration court which established a minimum wage for state awards but limited the right to strike. During his premiership, he reached agreement with the Federal, New South Wales and Victorian Governments over the Murray River leading to the River Murray Commission which is now the Murray-Darling Basin Commission. Peake was a teetotaller Presbyterian who held a plebiscite establishing six o'clock closing for hotels in 1915 which became the law in South Australia for the next fifty years.

Peake lost to the Labor Party under Crawford Vaughan at the 1915 election and lost his seat. However, he was elected as Member for Alexandra and became Leader of the Opposition. Vaughan lost his majority after the Labor Party split over conscription. Peake became Premier of a coalition government of Liberal Union and National Labor members.

This government reformed apprenticeship arrangements and reformed divorce laws. It won a solid majority at the 1918 election and established soldier settlements. However, the National Party crossed the floor to amend the Industrial Code Bill in concert with the Labor Party leading Peake to demand their full support. They refused leading Peake to form a totally Liberal Government. However, he died of a cerebral haemorrhage hours after the new Ministry was sworn in.

Notes

  1. "Hon Archibald Peake". Former members of the Parliament of South Australia. Retrieved 19 August 2022.
  2. "Statistical Record of the Legislature, 1836 - 2007" (PDF). Parliament of South Australia. Archived from the original (PDF) on 12 March 2011. Retrieved 14 August 2013.

References

 

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