Everything about John Quick Politician totally explained
Sir
John Quick (
14 April 1852 –
17 June 1932),
Australian
politician and
author, was the federal
Member of Parliament for
Bendigo from 1901 to 1913 and a leading
delegate to the
constitutional conventions of the
1890s.
Early life
Quick was born in Trevassa,
Cornwall,
England, in 1852, the son of John
Sr and Mary Quick. The family migrated to Australia in
1854, where John Sr, a
farmer, began prospecting at the
Bendigo goldfields. However, he died a few months later.
Quick was educated at a state school in Bendigo and at the age of 10 went to work in an iron
foundry at Long Gully. Quick later worked as an assistant at the Bendigo
Evening News, and then as a junior reporter at the Bendigo
Independent. Here he gained skills in
shorthand writing, and improved his general education.
In 1873, Quick moved to
Melbourne and passed the
matriculation examination at the
University of Melbourne. There he studied law, and with the help of scholarships, completed his course in 1877, graduating with a
Bachelor of Laws (LL.B). Quick was called to the
bar in June 1878, but instead continued as a journalist. Soon later, he became the leading parliamentary reporter at
The Age newspaper.
Political career
Victorian state politics
In
1880 Quick stood for election to the
Parliament of Victoria, and was elected the Member for Bendigo in the
Legislative Assembly. He was a supporter of the
liberal leader
Sir Graham Berry. At this time, he resigned from
The Age and returned to live in Bendigo, where he practiced as a
solicitor.
In 1882, Quick received a
Doctor of Laws degree (LL.D) after sitting an examination. In 1883, he married Catherine Harris. The couple didn't have any children together.
Quick was successful in parliament, and in 1886 was offered a
ministerial portfolio by the then
Premier of Victoria Duncan Gillies. However, after an
electoral redistribution, Quick lost his seat at the 1889 election.
Federation movement
Quick had become interested in the
Australian Federation movement while in the Victorian Parliament, and in the early 1890s successfully persuaded the
Australian Natives Association to advocate federation.
In August 1893, Quick attended the first informal Constitutional Convention at
Corowa, and proposed that a formal national convention should be established, with each of the six
Australian colonies to be represented by ten elected delegates. The proposal was agreed on, and in November 1893 Quick drafted a
bill which formed the basis of the deliberations at the formal convention held in
Adelaide in 1897. Quick was elected to the Adelaide convention as second on the list of ten Victorian representatives.
When Federation was inaugurated on
1 January 1901, Quick was
knighted in recognition of his services to the federation movement. On the same day, Quick and
Robert Garran published
The Annotated Constitution of the Australian Commonwealth, which is widely regarded as one of the most authoritative works on the
Australian Constitution.
Federal politics
At the
federal election of 1901, Quick was elected to the
Australian House of Representatives as Member for the
Division of Bendigo. He was considered a member of the
Protectionist Party. He was chairman of the first federal
tariff commission, and was
Postmaster-General in the third cabinet under
Alfred Deakin in 1909.
Quick was defeated in the
1913 election by the
Australian Labor Party candidate,
John Arthur. In 1922, he was appointed deputy president of the federal Arbitration Court, a position he held until his retirement on
25 March 1930.
Quick continued to be a prolific author. In 1904, along with
Littleton Groom, Quick published
The Judicial Power of the Commonwealth, and in
1919 published
The Legislative Powers of the Commonwealth and the States of Australia. After retiring in 1930, he worked on a book which he intended to call
The Book of Australian Authors, a bibliographical survey of various Australian authors,
poets and
playwrights. However, he died before he could complete the work.
Professor E Morris Miller continued his work, and the book was published in 1940 as
Australian Literature from its beginnings to 1935.
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