
Herbert Vere "Doc" Evatt, QC, PC, KStJ (30 April 1894 – 2 November 1965) was an Australian politician and judge. He served as a justice of the High Court of Australia from 1930 to 1940, Attorney-General and Minister for External Affairs from 1941 to 1949, and leader of the Australian Labor Party (ALP) and Leader of the Opposition from 1951 to 1960. Evatt is considered one of Australia's most prominent public intellectuals of the twentieth century.
The Right Honourable Dr Herbert Evatt QC KStJ | |
---|---|
![]() Evatt in 1948 | |
Justice of the High Court of Australia | |
In office 19 December 1930 – 2 September 1940 | |
Nominated by | James Scullin |
Preceded by | Sir Charles Powers |
Succeeded by | Sir Dudley Williams |
Chief Justice of New South Wales | |
In office 15 February 1960 – 24 October 1962 | |
Preceded by | Sir Kenneth Street |
Succeeded by | Sir Leslie Herron |
Leader of the Opposition | |
In office 20 June 1951 – 9 February 1960 | |
Prime Minister | Robert Menzies |
Deputy | Arthur Calwell |
Preceded by | Ben Chifley |
Succeeded by | Arthur Calwell |
Leader of the Labor Party | |
In office 20 June 1951 – 9 February 1960 | |
Deputy | Arthur Calwell |
Preceded by | Ben Chifley |
Succeeded by | Arthur Calwell |
Deputy Leader of the Labor Party | |
In office 31 October 1946 – 20 June 1951 | |
Leader | Ben Chifley |
Preceded by | Frank Forde |
Succeeded by | Arthur Calwell |
Attorney-General for Australia | |
In office 7 October 1941 – 19 December 1949 | |
Prime Minister | John Curtin Frank Forde Ben Chifley |
Preceded by | Billy Hughes |
Succeeded by | John Spicer |
Minister for External Affairs | |
In office 7 October 1941 – 19 December 1949 | |
Prime Minister | John Curtin Frank Forde Ben Chifley |
Preceded by | Sir Frederick Stewart |
Succeeded by | Percy Spender |
President of the United Nations General Assembly | |
In office 1948–1949 | |
Preceded by | José Arce |
Succeeded by | Carlos P. Romulo |
Member of the Australian Parliament for Barton | |
In office 21 September 1940 – 22 November 1958 | |
Preceded by | Albert Lane |
Succeeded by | Len Reynolds |
Member of the Australian Parliament for Hunter | |
In office 22 November 1958 – 10 February 1960 | |
Preceded by | Rowley James |
Succeeded by | Bert James |
Personal details | |
Born | Herbert Vere Evatt 30 April 1894 East Maitland, Colony of New South Wales, British Empire |
Died | 2 November 1965 Forrest, Australian Capital Territory, Australia | (aged 71)
Political party | Labor |
Spouse | Mary Sheffer (m. 1920) |
Relations | Clive Evatt (brother) Elizabeth Evatt (niece) Penelope Seidler (niece) Sir George Evatt (uncle) |
Children | 2 |
Education | Fort Street Model School |
Alma mater | University of Sydney |
Occupation | Lawyer Academic Politician Judge |
Evatt was born in East Maitland, New South Wales, and grew up on Sydney's North Shore. He studied law at the University of Sydney, attaining the degree of Doctor of Laws (LL.D.) in 1924. After a period in the New South Wales Legislative Assembly (1925–1930), Evatt was appointed to the High Court in 1930 by the Scullin government. He was 36 years old, and remains the youngest appointee in the court's history. He was considered an innovative judge, but left the court to seek election to federal parliament at the 1940 federal election.
In 1941, the ALP returned to government under Prime Minister John Curtin. Evatt was appointed Attorney-General and Minister for External Affairs, positions he held under Curtin and Ben Chifley until the government's defeat at the 1949 federal election. He served as President of the United Nations General Assembly from 1948 to 1949, and helped to draft the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. After Chifley's death in 1951, Evatt was elected as his successor as ALP leader. Internal tensions over the party's attitude to communism during the Cold War culminated in a party split in 1955. The ALP was defeated at three consecutive federal elections under Evatt's leadership, in 1954, 1955 and 1958. He faced three leadership spills before being convinced to retire from politics in 1960 and accept the post of Chief Justice of New South Wales.
Early life
Evatt was born on 30 April 1894 at the Bank Hotel in East Maitland, New South Wales. He was the fifth of eight sons born to Jane Sophia (known as "Jeanie") and John Ashmore Hamilton Evatt; two of his older brothers died in infancy. On his father's side, Evatt was descended from an Anglo-Irish family with a history of military service – his paternal grandfather was Captain George Evatt of the 70th (Surrey) Regiment of Foot, while an uncle was Major-General Sir George Evatt. His father was born in Cawnpore (now Kanpur), India, but grew up in Dublin, Ireland. He arrived in Australia at the age of 16, and eventually settled in Morpeth, where in 1882 he married Jeanie Gray, the daughter of a marine engineer from Sydney. Evatt's maternal grandfather was born in Shoreditch, London, England, while his maternal grandmother was born in County Limerick, Ireland. His parents – both Anglicans – moved to East Maitland in 1885, where they managed the Hunter River Hotel until 1891 and then took over the smaller Bank Hotel.
Evatt began his education at a local state school. His father suffered a protracted bout of ill health and died in October 1901, when his son was seven. The family stayed in Maitland for three more years, but eventually moved to Sydney to be closer to his mother's family, who lived on the North Shore. She bought a home in Milsons Point overlooking Sydney Harbour, within walking distance of her parents' home in Kirribilli. The house was later demolished to make way for the Sydney Harbour Bridge. Evatt was enrolled in the Fort Street Model School, located directly across the harbour on Observatory Hill. He attended the school from 1905 to 1911, in his final year serving as head prefect and captain of the cricket and rugby union teams. He finished second in the state senior examinations, and was dux of his school.
University
In 1912, Evatt began studying at the University of Sydney, where he was a resident of St Andrew's College. He graduated in 1919 with a Bachelor of Arts in mathematics, Logic, Philosophy and English with (Triple) First-Class Honours and the University Medal in Philosophy in 1915, a Master of Arts in 1916, and a Bachelor of Laws with First-Class Honours and the University Medal in 1918. At university Evatt played cricket, rugby league football, hockey and baseball. He was also the Editor of Hermes, the annual student literary journal, was a Tutor at St Andrew's College, and the President of the University of Sydney Union from 1916 to 1917. He graduated Legum Doctor (LLD) in 1924 from the University of Sydney with a thesis on the royal prerogative. Evatt remained involved with the university after his graduation, staying on as the patron of the University Amateur Rugby League club.
State politics
Because of poor eyesight, Evatt was unable to serve in the First World War, in which two of his brothers were killed. He became a prominent industrial lawyer in Sydney, working mainly for trade union clients. In 1925 Evatt was elected as an Australian Labor Party member for Balmain in the New South Wales Legislative Assembly. Re-elected as an "Independent Labor" candidate in 1927, Evatt served in the Legislative Assembly until 1930.
High Court (1930–1940)
In 1930 the Labor government headed by James Scullin appointed Evatt as the youngest-ever justice of the High Court of Australia. Regarded by some as a brilliant and innovative judge, he delivered a number of minority judgments, several of which were adopted by High Court majorities decades later. Evatt could, however, be partial on the bench. Sir Owen Dixon noted in Australian Woollen Mills Ltd v F.S. Walton & Co. Ltd (1937 58 CLR 641) that Evatt was on that occasion "full of antagonism to the respondent ... Most unjudicial." Whenever Evatt was not particularly interested in a case he appears to have generally gone along with Dixon.
Evatt was one of six justices of the High Court who had served in the Parliament of New South Wales, along with Edmund Barton, Richard O'Connor, Adrian Knox, Albert Piddington and Edward McTiernan. In 1934 Evatt played an important part in the Egon Kisch exclusion when he ruled that the Lyons government's ban on Kisch entering Australia had been incorrectly executed and that Kisch was free to enter the country.
Federal politics
In 1940, Evatt resigned from the High Court to return to politics, and was elected federal MP for the Sydney seat of Barton in the House of Representatives. [citation needed]. When Labor came to power under John Curtin in 1941, Evatt became Attorney-General and Foreign Minister. He became deputy leader of the Labor Party and de facto Deputy Prime Minister after the 1946 election, under the leadership of Ben Chifley. [citation needed]
While in London, Evatt acted as the spokesperson for the Australian Board of Control for International Cricket and made personal representations to the Marylebone Cricket Club who were reluctant to send a cricket team to tour Australia so soon after the war. He put forward convincing arguments as to the need to re-establish sporting relations and the financial benefits of the tour and the MCC agreed to the 1946–47 Ashes series.Don Bradman would later aver that the "quick resumption of Anglo-Australian Tests had justified itself in every way, psychologically, technically, financially".
Evatt was a defender of the White Australia Policy. There was a strong view in Australia that any softening of the White Australia stance might result in cheaper labour being imported from overseas. Another prevailing sentiment was that multiculturalism resulted in instability. Evatt, opposing resolutions which could have led to more Asian immigration to Australia, told the Chinese delegation at San Francisco:
You have always insisted on the right to determine the composition of your own people. Australia wants that right now. What you are attempting to do now, Japan attempted after the last war [the First World War] and was prevented by Australia. Had we opened New Guinea and Australia to Japanese immigration then the Pacific War by now might have ended disastrously and we might have had another shambles like that experienced in Malaya.
President of the UN General Assembly
Evatt joined the diplomatic councils of the allies during World War II. In 1945, he played a leading role in the founding of the UN. He was President of the United Nations General Assembly from 1948 to 1949 as part of the third session of the United Nations General Assembly, and was prominent in the negotiations that led to the creation of Israel as chair of the Ad Hoc Committee on the Palestinian Question. He helped draft the United Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights.
Leader of the Opposition (1951–1960)
In the 1949 election, Labor was defeated by Menzies' new Liberal Party. At this election, Evatt faced war hero Nancy Wake and suffered a massive swing in his own electorate, seeing his majority reduced from a very safe 66.9 percent to an extremely marginal 53.2 percent. He faced Wake again in the double dissolution election of 1951 and was nearly defeated, seeing her off by only 243 votes (out of more than 41,600 cast). When Ben Chifley (still Labor leader) suddenly died several months later, Evatt was elected unopposed as his successor. At first his leadership went well. He campaigned successfully against Menzies' attempt to amend the Constitution to ban the Communist Party. Many convinced anti-Communists in the Labor Party believed this was both bad politics and bad policy because of the active Communist infiltration of numerous trade unions, and because of the threat to national security posed by Communism. None of the anti-Communists, aside from Stan Keon, openly censured Evatt's stance. [citation needed]
Evatt campaigned well in the 1954 election and came within four seats of defeating the Menzies government. The Labor Party actually achieved a higher two-party-preferred vote in the election than the governing Liberal-Country Coalition, but the uneven distribution of votes meant that the Coalition retained more seats and were able to hold onto government. Evatt believed that the Petrov Affair, involving the defection of a Soviet diplomat and his wife during the election campaign, had been contrived through Menzies's conspiring with security services with the specific purpose of discrediting Evatt. In the ensuing Royal Commission on Espionage, documents tendered were alleged to provide evidence of an extensive Soviet spy ring in Australia, and named (among many others), two of Evatt's staff members. Evatt appeared before the Royal Commission as attorney for his staff members. His cross-examination of the key ASIO operative Michael Bialoguski transformed the commission's hearings and greatly perturbed the government. The Royal Commission quickly withdrew Evatt's leave to appear. Evatt claimed this denial was because of judicial bias in favour of the Menzies government. [citation needed]
Evatt's loss of the election and his belief that Menzies had conspired with ASIO to contrive Petrov's defection led to criticism within the Labor Party of his decision to appear before the Royal Commission. He compounded this by writing to the Soviet Foreign Minister, Vyacheslav Molotov, asking if allegations of Soviet espionage in Australia were true. When Molotov replied, naturally denying the allegations, Evatt read the letter out in Parliament, bringing the House into silence momentarily before both sides of Parliament began laughing.
Evatt also blamed the Catholic-dominated "Groupers" in the Labor Party for sabotaging his election campaign. He later publicly attacked The Groupers, who had infiltrated the Victorian Labor Party, thus precipitating a split in the party, with most of the "Groupers" leaving or being expelled. The disaffected formed the Democratic Labor Party, which directed its preferences against Labor at subsequent elections. This, together with an obsessive hatred of Menzies, led Evatt into a number of unforced errors. Due to these factors, Labor was roundly defeated in the 1955 election, suffering an 11-seat swing. Evatt himself was nearly defeated in Barton after almost three-quarters of independents' preferences flowed to his Liberal opponent. For the 1958 election, he transferred to Hunter, one of the few safe country seats for Labor. He offered to resign as leader if the DLP would return to the party. The offer was rejected and Labor was soundly defeated again. [citation needed]
Chief Justice of New South Wales (1960–1962)
In 1960, the Labor government in New South Wales appointed Evatt the Chief Justice of New South Wales, an appointment that was widely seen as a means of giving him a dignified exit from politics.
Health
Recent biographies of Evatt agree that his behaviour became more eccentric from the late 1950s. Pat Fiske and David McKnight, in their 1995 television documentary Doc, attributed what they described as Evatt's "deteriorating mental functioning" to arteriosclerosis.
In 1962, Evatt was suffering from stress and was persuaded to retire from the bench. He died from pneumonia in Canberra on 2 November 1965, aged 71.
Personal life
Two years after being admitted to the New South Wales Bar, Evatt, an Anglican, married Mary Alice Sheffer at the Congregational Church in Mosman, New South Wales on 27 November 1920. Even with his sometimes turbulent nature, the relationship was one of devotion. The couple had two children, Peter and Rosalind, whom they adopted due to Mary Alice's serious gynaeocological issues.
Peter Evatt became an Olympic rower, who was 1953 national sculling champion and represented Australia in rowing at the 1956 Olympic Games in Melbourne. Peter was a member of the ALP, like his father, and stood for the seat of Bennelong at the 1969 federal elections.
In 1972, aged 50, Peter died by accidental electrocution while trying to repair a faulty electric toaster. He was survived by his six children. His death was reported by The Age on 27 December 1972.
In 1953, Rosalind Evatt married Peter Carrodus, the assistant manager of a Canberra radio station, 2CA.
Relatives
Evatt's youngest brother was Clive R. Evatt, whose three children are noted below:
- Evatt's niece, Penelope Seidler, an architect, married Harry Seidler in 1958.
- Evatt's niece, Elizabeth Evatt, was a barrister and judge.
- Evatt's nephew, Clive A. Evatt, was a defamation barrister.
Literary works
During his life, Evatt had a varied career as a writer, covering such topics as law and labour history. His book on the politics of the Rum Rebellion is still considered relevant, although others disagree with Evatt's view. Evatt contributed an article on "Cricket and the British Commonwealth" to the 1949 edition of the Wisden Cricketer's Almanack.
His publications include:
- H. V. Evatt, Australian Labour Leader: The Story Of W.A. Holman and the Labour Movement, 1954
- H. V. Evatt, The King and His Dominion Governors, 1936
- H. V. Evatt, Injustice within the Law. A study of the case of the Dorsetshire Labourers, 1937
- H. V. Evatt, The Royal Prerogative, 1930 (this was his LLD thesis)
- H. V. Evatt, Rum Rebellion: A Study of the Overthrow of Governor Bligh by John Macarthur and the New South Wales Corps, 1943
- H. V. Evatt, Liberalism in Australia: An Historical Sketch of Australian Politics down to the year 1915, 1918
Honours
- In 1924 Evatt was awarded the degree LLD, for his dissertation on prerogative powers of Governors in the British legal system.
- The Evatt Foundation, a research institute for the labour movement, is named in his honour.
- The suburb of Evatt, which lies in the Belconnen district of Canberra, Australian Capital Territory, is also named in his honour.
- One of the high schools (Maitland Boys High School) in his home town of Maitland was briefly renamed Evatt High School in his honour, before being renamed Maitland High School when it became unisex some years later.
- In November 1965, the NSW State Government opened Evatt Park in Lugarno, which is still used frequently for recreation.
- United Nations Youth Australia runs an annual national high schools Model United Nations Security Council competition, the Evatt Cup, which has rounds in every state and territory.
- Evatt was nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize in 1950 and 1953, but was not selected in both instances.
References
- Haigh, Gideon (2021). The Brilliant Boy: Doc Evatt and the Great Australian Dissent. Sydney: Scribner. ISBN 9781760856120.
- Crockett, Peter (1993). Evatt: A Life. Oxford University Press. p. 2. ISBN 0195535588.
- Crockett (1993), p. 32.
- Crockett (1993), p. 33.
- Crockett (1993), p. 34–35.
- Robyn Walden. "Evatt Biography". Evatt Collection, Special Collections. Flinders University Library.
- Bolton, G. C. (1996). "Evatt, Herbert Vere (Bert) (1894–1965)". Australian Dictionary of Biography. Vol. 14. Canberra: National Centre of Biography, Australian National University. ISBN 978-0-522-84459-7. ISSN 1833-7538. OCLC 70677943. Retrieved 18 December 2021.
- "Dr. H. V. Evatt". The Canberra Times. 19 December 1930. p. 1. Retrieved 10 April 2018 – via trove.nla.gov.au.
- H V Evatt, "The Royal Prerogative". Written in 1924 for the award of his LLD from the University of Sydney.
- K.H. Bailey, "Introduction to the First Edition" in Herbert Vere Evatt, The King and His Australian Governors (Melbourne, F.W. Cheshire, 1936, 2nd edn 1967), p xxxvi.
- Merlin (23 March 1927). "Rugby League's Big Money". Referee. Retrieved 15 August 2021.
- "Mr Herbert Vere Evatt (1894-1965)". Former members of the Parliament of New South Wales. Retrieved 23 September 2019.
- Owen Dixon Diary, 29 April 1937, found in Dixon's personal papers.
- Ayres, Philip (2003). Owen Dixon profile. The Miegunyah Press, Melbourne University. ISBN 0-522-85045-6. p 62.
- "Kisch, Egon Erwin (1885–1948)". Australian Dictionary of Biography. Canberra: National Centre of Biography, Australian National University. 2006. ISBN 978-0-522-84459-7. ISSN 1833-7538. OCLC 70677943. Retrieved 18 December 2021.
- Clif Cary, Cricket Controversy, Test matches in Australia 1946–47, T. Werner Laurie Ltd, 1948, pp 3–4.
- Ray Robinson and Mike Coward. England vs Australia 1932–1985, p. 292, in E.W. Swanton (ed), Barclay's World of Cricket, Willow, 1986.
- E.W. Swanton, Swanton in Australia with MCC 1946–1975, Fontana/Collins, 1975, pg. 68.
- "Dr Evatt Goes to San Francisco". Museum of Australian Democracy at Old Parliament House. 25 June 2015. Retrieved 4 August 2021.
- William Roger Louis, The British Empire in the Middle East, 1945–1951, pp. 19–20. Oxford: Clarendon Press (1984).
- Report on Petrov Affair Archived 17 October 2011 at the Wayback Machine, moadoph.gov.au
- Robert Menzies profile Archived 13 November 2013 at the Wayback Machine, National Archives of Australia
- Weeks, Phillipa (2000). "Owen, Sir William Francis (1899–1972)". Australian Dictionary of Biography. Canberra: National Centre of Biography, Australian National University. ISBN 978-0-522-84459-7. ISSN 1833-7538. OCLC 70677943. Retrieved 18 December 2021.
- Henderson, Gerard (12 April 2005). "Labor in denial about Evatt, its flawed hero". The Age.
- Andrew Campbell. (2007.) "Dr. H. V. Evatt, Part One: A Question of Sanity", National Observer, 73: 25–39.
- Kirby, Michael. "Independence of the Judiciary: Basic Principles, New Challenges". Retrieved 18 December 2021.
- "Peter Evatt Wins Sculling Title". The Canberra Times. 16 February 1953. Retrieved 18 October 2020 – via Trove.
- "Peter Evatt Found Dead". The Age. 27 December 1972.
- "Notable Canberra Wedding". The Age. 30 November 1953.
- "Advisory Council Members – Built Environment – UNSW Australia". be.unsw.edu.au. 19 January 2006. Archived from the original on 29 March 2016. Retrieved 15 July 2016.
- Melbourne, National Foundation for Australian Women and The University of. "Evatt, Elizabeth Andreas - Woman - The Australian Women's Register". www.womenaustralia.info. Retrieved 18 December 2021.
- "Clive Evatt: King of the Plaintiffs' Defamation Bar". The Sydney Morning Herald. 9 August 2018. Retrieved 18 October 2020.
- Michael Duffy. Proof of history's rum deal Sydney Morning Herald, 27 January 2006.
- "Evatt Foundation". Evatt.labor.net.au. Archived from the original on 2 November 2011. Retrieved 4 November 2011.
Bibliography
- Wake, Valdemar Robert (2004). No Ribbons or Medals: The story of 'Hereward', an Australian counter espionage officer. Mitcham, South Australia, Australia: Jacobyte Books. ISBN 1-74100-165-X.ISBN 9781741001655 available from Digital Print, South Australia.
Further reading
- Buckley, Ken; Dale, Barbara and Reynolds, Wayne. Doc Evatt, Cheshire, Melbourne (1994); ISBN 0-582-87498-X
- Dalziel, Allan. Evatt. The Enigma, Lansdowne Press, Melbourne (1967).
- Haigh, Gideon. The Brilliant Boy: Doc Evatt and the Great Australian Dissent, Simon and Schuster, Sydney (2021); ISBN 9781760856113
- Hogan, Ashley. Moving in the Open Daylight: Doc Evatt, an Australian at the United Nations, Sydney University Press: Sydney, (2008); ISBN 9781920899288
- Makin, Norman. Federal Labour Leaders, Union Printing, Sydney, New South Wales (1961), pp. 140–145.
- Murphy, John. Evatt: A Life, NewSouth Publishing, Sydney (2016) ISBN 9781742234465
- Renouf, Alan. Let Justice Be Done. The Foreign Policy of Dr H.V. Evatt, University of Queensland Press, St Lucia, Queensland (1983); ISBN 0-7022-1893-6
- Tennant, Kylie. Evatt. Politics and Justice, Angus and Robertson, Sydney (1970); ISBN 0-207-12533-3
External links
- Evatt Collection at Flinders University Library
- Newspaper clippings about H. V. Evatt in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW
Herbert Vere Doc Evatt QC PC KStJ 30 April 1894 2 November 1965 was an Australian politician and judge He served as a justice of the High Court of Australia from 1930 to 1940 Attorney General and Minister for External Affairs from 1941 to 1949 and leader of the Australian Labor Party ALP and Leader of the Opposition from 1951 to 1960 Evatt is considered one of Australia s most prominent public intellectuals of the twentieth century The Right HonourableDr Herbert EvattQC KStJEvatt in 1948Justice of the High Court of AustraliaIn office 19 December 1930 2 September 1940Nominated byJames ScullinPreceded bySir Charles PowersSucceeded bySir Dudley WilliamsChief Justice of New South WalesIn office 15 February 1960 24 October 1962Preceded bySir Kenneth StreetSucceeded bySir Leslie HerronLeader of the OppositionIn office 20 June 1951 9 February 1960Prime MinisterRobert MenziesDeputyArthur CalwellPreceded byBen ChifleySucceeded byArthur CalwellLeader of the Labor PartyIn office 20 June 1951 9 February 1960DeputyArthur CalwellPreceded byBen ChifleySucceeded byArthur CalwellDeputy Leader of the Labor PartyIn office 31 October 1946 20 June 1951LeaderBen ChifleyPreceded byFrank FordeSucceeded byArthur CalwellAttorney General for AustraliaIn office 7 October 1941 19 December 1949Prime MinisterJohn Curtin Frank Forde Ben ChifleyPreceded byBilly HughesSucceeded byJohn SpicerMinister for External AffairsIn office 7 October 1941 19 December 1949Prime MinisterJohn Curtin Frank Forde Ben ChifleyPreceded bySir Frederick StewartSucceeded byPercy SpenderPresident of the United Nations General AssemblyIn office 1948 1949Preceded byJose ArceSucceeded byCarlos P RomuloMember of the Australian Parliament for BartonIn office 21 September 1940 22 November 1958Preceded byAlbert LaneSucceeded byLen ReynoldsMember of the Australian Parliament for HunterIn office 22 November 1958 10 February 1960Preceded byRowley JamesSucceeded byBert JamesPersonal detailsBornHerbert Vere Evatt 1894 04 30 30 April 1894 East Maitland Colony of New South Wales British EmpireDied2 November 1965 1965 11 02 aged 71 Forrest Australian Capital Territory AustraliaPolitical partyLaborSpouseMary Sheffer m 1920 wbr RelationsClive Evatt brother Elizabeth Evatt niece Penelope Seidler niece Sir George Evatt uncle Children2EducationFort Street Model SchoolAlma materUniversity of SydneyOccupationLawyer Academic Politician Judge Evatt was born in East Maitland New South Wales and grew up on Sydney s North Shore He studied law at the University of Sydney attaining the degree of Doctor of Laws LL D in 1924 After a period in the New South Wales Legislative Assembly 1925 1930 Evatt was appointed to the High Court in 1930 by the Scullin government He was 36 years old and remains the youngest appointee in the court s history He was considered an innovative judge but left the court to seek election to federal parliament at the 1940 federal election In 1941 the ALP returned to government under Prime Minister John Curtin Evatt was appointed Attorney General and Minister for External Affairs positions he held under Curtin and Ben Chifley until the government s defeat at the 1949 federal election He served as President of the United Nations General Assembly from 1948 to 1949 and helped to draft the Universal Declaration of Human Rights After Chifley s death in 1951 Evatt was elected as his successor as ALP leader Internal tensions over the party s attitude to communism during the Cold War culminated in a party split in 1955 The ALP was defeated at three consecutive federal elections under Evatt s leadership in 1954 1955 and 1958 He faced three leadership spills before being convinced to retire from politics in 1960 and accept the post of Chief Justice of New South Wales Early lifeEvatt was born on 30 April 1894 at the Bank Hotel in East Maitland New South Wales He was the fifth of eight sons born to Jane Sophia known as Jeanie and John Ashmore Hamilton Evatt two of his older brothers died in infancy On his father s side Evatt was descended from an Anglo Irish family with a history of military service his paternal grandfather was Captain George Evatt of the 70th Surrey Regiment of Foot while an uncle was Major General Sir George Evatt His father was born in Cawnpore now Kanpur India but grew up in Dublin Ireland He arrived in Australia at the age of 16 and eventually settled in Morpeth where in 1882 he married Jeanie Gray the daughter of a marine engineer from Sydney Evatt s maternal grandfather was born in Shoreditch London England while his maternal grandmother was born in County Limerick Ireland His parents both Anglicans moved to East Maitland in 1885 where they managed the Hunter River Hotel until 1891 and then took over the smaller Bank Hotel Evatt began his education at a local state school His father suffered a protracted bout of ill health and died in October 1901 when his son was seven The family stayed in Maitland for three more years but eventually moved to Sydney to be closer to his mother s family who lived on the North Shore She bought a home in Milsons Point overlooking Sydney Harbour within walking distance of her parents home in Kirribilli The house was later demolished to make way for the Sydney Harbour Bridge Evatt was enrolled in the Fort Street Model School located directly across the harbour on Observatory Hill He attended the school from 1905 to 1911 in his final year serving as head prefect and captain of the cricket and rugby union teams He finished second in the state senior examinations and was dux of his school UniversityIn 1912 Evatt began studying at the University of Sydney where he was a resident of St Andrew s College He graduated in 1919 with a Bachelor of Arts in mathematics Logic Philosophy and English with Triple First Class Honours and the University Medal in Philosophy in 1915 a Master of Arts in 1916 and a Bachelor of Laws with First Class Honours and the University Medal in 1918 At university Evatt played cricket rugby league football hockey and baseball He was also the Editor of Hermes the annual student literary journal was a Tutor at St Andrew s College and the President of the University of Sydney Union from 1916 to 1917 He graduated Legum Doctor LLD in 1924 from the University of Sydney with a thesis on the royal prerogative Evatt remained involved with the university after his graduation staying on as the patron of the University Amateur Rugby League club State politicsBecause of poor eyesight Evatt was unable to serve in the First World War in which two of his brothers were killed He became a prominent industrial lawyer in Sydney working mainly for trade union clients In 1925 Evatt was elected as an Australian Labor Party member for Balmain in the New South Wales Legislative Assembly Re elected as an Independent Labor candidate in 1927 Evatt served in the Legislative Assembly until 1930 Evatt in 1925High Court 1930 1940 In 1930 the Labor government headed by James Scullin appointed Evatt as the youngest ever justice of the High Court of Australia Regarded by some as a brilliant and innovative judge he delivered a number of minority judgments several of which were adopted by High Court majorities decades later Evatt could however be partial on the bench Sir Owen Dixon noted in Australian Woollen Mills Ltd v F S Walton amp Co Ltd 1937 58 CLR 641 that Evatt was on that occasion full of antagonism to the respondent Most unjudicial Whenever Evatt was not particularly interested in a case he appears to have generally gone along with Dixon Evatt was one of six justices of the High Court who had served in the Parliament of New South Wales along with Edmund Barton Richard O Connor Adrian Knox Albert Piddington and Edward McTiernan In 1934 Evatt played an important part in the Egon Kisch exclusion when he ruled that the Lyons government s ban on Kisch entering Australia had been incorrectly executed and that Kisch was free to enter the country Evatt left and Ben Chifley middle with Clement Attlee right at the Dominion and British Leaders Conference London 1946Federal politicsIn 1940 Evatt resigned from the High Court to return to politics and was elected federal MP for the Sydney seat of Barton in the House of Representatives citation needed When Labor came to power under John Curtin in 1941 Evatt became Attorney General and Foreign Minister He became deputy leader of the Labor Party and de facto Deputy Prime Minister after the 1946 election under the leadership of Ben Chifley citation needed While in London Evatt acted as the spokesperson for the Australian Board of Control for International Cricket and made personal representations to the Marylebone Cricket Club who were reluctant to send a cricket team to tour Australia so soon after the war He put forward convincing arguments as to the need to re establish sporting relations and the financial benefits of the tour and the MCC agreed to the 1946 47 Ashes series Don Bradman would later aver that the quick resumption of Anglo Australian Tests had justified itself in every way psychologically technically financially Evatt was a defender of the White Australia Policy There was a strong view in Australia that any softening of the White Australia stance might result in cheaper labour being imported from overseas Another prevailing sentiment was that multiculturalism resulted in instability Evatt opposing resolutions which could have led to more Asian immigration to Australia told the Chinese delegation at San Francisco You have always insisted on the right to determine the composition of your own people Australia wants that right now What you are attempting to do now Japan attempted after the last war the First World War and was prevented by Australia Had we opened New Guinea and Australia to Japanese immigration then the Pacific War by now might have ended disastrously and we might have had another shambles like that experienced in Malaya President of the UN General Assembly Evatt in 1948 with UN Secretary General Trygve Lie Evatt joined the diplomatic councils of the allies during World War II In 1945 he played a leading role in the founding of the UN He was President of the United Nations General Assembly from 1948 to 1949 as part of the third session of the United Nations General Assembly and was prominent in the negotiations that led to the creation of Israel as chair of the Ad Hoc Committee on the Palestinian Question He helped draft the United Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights Leader of the Opposition 1951 1960 In the 1949 election Labor was defeated by Menzies new Liberal Party At this election Evatt faced war hero Nancy Wake and suffered a massive swing in his own electorate seeing his majority reduced from a very safe 66 9 percent to an extremely marginal 53 2 percent He faced Wake again in the double dissolution election of 1951 and was nearly defeated seeing her off by only 243 votes out of more than 41 600 cast When Ben Chifley still Labor leader suddenly died several months later Evatt was elected unopposed as his successor At first his leadership went well He campaigned successfully against Menzies attempt to amend the Constitution to ban the Communist Party Many convinced anti Communists in the Labor Party believed this was both bad politics and bad policy because of the active Communist infiltration of numerous trade unions and because of the threat to national security posed by Communism None of the anti Communists aside from Stan Keon openly censured Evatt s stance citation needed Evatt campaigned well in the 1954 election and came within four seats of defeating the Menzies government The Labor Party actually achieved a higher two party preferred vote in the election than the governing Liberal Country Coalition but the uneven distribution of votes meant that the Coalition retained more seats and were able to hold onto government Evatt believed that the Petrov Affair involving the defection of a Soviet diplomat and his wife during the election campaign had been contrived through Menzies s conspiring with security services with the specific purpose of discrediting Evatt In the ensuing Royal Commission on Espionage documents tendered were alleged to provide evidence of an extensive Soviet spy ring in Australia and named among many others two of Evatt s staff members Evatt appeared before the Royal Commission as attorney for his staff members His cross examination of the key ASIO operative Michael Bialoguski transformed the commission s hearings and greatly perturbed the government The Royal Commission quickly withdrew Evatt s leave to appear Evatt claimed this denial was because of judicial bias in favour of the Menzies government citation needed Evatt s loss of the election and his belief that Menzies had conspired with ASIO to contrive Petrov s defection led to criticism within the Labor Party of his decision to appear before the Royal Commission He compounded this by writing to the Soviet Foreign Minister Vyacheslav Molotov asking if allegations of Soviet espionage in Australia were true When Molotov replied naturally denying the allegations Evatt read the letter out in Parliament bringing the House into silence momentarily before both sides of Parliament began laughing Evatt also blamed the Catholic dominated Groupers in the Labor Party for sabotaging his election campaign He later publicly attacked The Groupers who had infiltrated the Victorian Labor Party thus precipitating a split in the party with most of the Groupers leaving or being expelled The disaffected formed the Democratic Labor Party which directed its preferences against Labor at subsequent elections This together with an obsessive hatred of Menzies led Evatt into a number of unforced errors Due to these factors Labor was roundly defeated in the 1955 election suffering an 11 seat swing Evatt himself was nearly defeated in Barton after almost three quarters of independents preferences flowed to his Liberal opponent For the 1958 election he transferred to Hunter one of the few safe country seats for Labor He offered to resign as leader if the DLP would return to the party The offer was rejected and Labor was soundly defeated again citation needed Chief Justice of New South Wales 1960 1962 In 1960 the Labor government in New South Wales appointed Evatt the Chief Justice of New South Wales an appointment that was widely seen as a means of giving him a dignified exit from politics Health Recent biographies of Evatt agree that his behaviour became more eccentric from the late 1950s Pat Fiske and David McKnight in their 1995 television documentary Doc attributed what they described as Evatt s deteriorating mental functioning to arteriosclerosis In 1962 Evatt was suffering from stress and was persuaded to retire from the bench He died from pneumonia in Canberra on 2 November 1965 aged 71 Personal lifeEvatt in 1926 with his wife Mary and son Peter Two years after being admitted to the New South Wales Bar Evatt an Anglican married Mary Alice Sheffer at the Congregational Church in Mosman New South Wales on 27 November 1920 Even with his sometimes turbulent nature the relationship was one of devotion The couple had two children Peter and Rosalind whom they adopted due to Mary Alice s serious gynaeocological issues Peter Evatt became an Olympic rower who was 1953 national sculling champion and represented Australia in rowing at the 1956 Olympic Games in Melbourne Peter was a member of the ALP like his father and stood for the seat of Bennelong at the 1969 federal elections In 1972 aged 50 Peter died by accidental electrocution while trying to repair a faulty electric toaster He was survived by his six children His death was reported by The Age on 27 December 1972 In 1953 Rosalind Evatt married Peter Carrodus the assistant manager of a Canberra radio station 2CA Relatives Evatt s youngest brother was Clive R Evatt whose three children are noted below Evatt s niece Penelope Seidler an architect married Harry Seidler in 1958 Evatt s niece Elizabeth Evatt was a barrister and judge Evatt s nephew Clive A Evatt was a defamation barrister Literary worksDuring his life Evatt had a varied career as a writer covering such topics as law and labour history His book on the politics of the Rum Rebellion is still considered relevant although others disagree with Evatt s view Evatt contributed an article on Cricket and the British Commonwealth to the 1949 edition of the Wisden Cricketer s Almanack His publications include H V Evatt Australian Labour Leader The Story Of W A Holman and the Labour Movement 1954 H V Evatt The King and His Dominion Governors 1936 H V Evatt Injustice within the Law A study of the case of the Dorsetshire Labourers 1937 H V Evatt The Royal Prerogative 1930 this was his LLD thesis H V Evatt Rum Rebellion A Study of the Overthrow of Governor Bligh by John Macarthur and the New South Wales Corps 1943 H V Evatt Liberalism in Australia An Historical Sketch of Australian Politics down to the year 1915 1918HonoursIn 1924 Evatt was awarded the degree LLD for his dissertation on prerogative powers of Governors in the British legal system The Evatt Foundation a research institute for the labour movement is named in his honour The suburb of Evatt which lies in the Belconnen district of Canberra Australian Capital Territory is also named in his honour One of the high schools Maitland Boys High School in his home town of Maitland was briefly renamed Evatt High School in his honour before being renamed Maitland High School when it became unisex some years later In November 1965 the NSW State Government opened Evatt Park in Lugarno which is still used frequently for recreation United Nations Youth Australia runs an annual national high schools Model United Nations Security Council competition the Evatt Cup which has rounds in every state and territory Evatt was nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize in 1950 and 1953 but was not selected in both instances ReferencesHaigh Gideon 2021 The Brilliant Boy Doc Evatt and the Great Australian Dissent Sydney Scribner ISBN 9781760856120 Crockett Peter 1993 Evatt A Life Oxford University Press p 2 ISBN 0195535588 Crockett 1993 p 32 Crockett 1993 p 33 Crockett 1993 p 34 35 Robyn Walden Evatt Biography Evatt Collection Special Collections Flinders University Library Bolton G C 1996 Evatt Herbert Vere Bert 1894 1965 Australian Dictionary of Biography Vol 14 Canberra National Centre of Biography Australian National University ISBN 978 0 522 84459 7 ISSN 1833 7538 OCLC 70677943 Retrieved 18 December 2021 Dr H V Evatt The Canberra Times 19 December 1930 p 1 Retrieved 10 April 2018 via trove nla gov au H V Evatt The Royal Prerogative Written in 1924 for the award of his LLD from the University of Sydney K H Bailey Introduction to the First Edition in Herbert Vere Evatt The King and His Australian Governors Melbourne F W Cheshire 1936 2nd edn 1967 p xxxvi Merlin 23 March 1927 Rugby League s Big Money Referee Retrieved 15 August 2021 Mr Herbert Vere Evatt 1894 1965 Former members of the Parliament of New South Wales Retrieved 23 September 2019 Owen Dixon Diary 29 April 1937 found in Dixon s personal papers Ayres Philip 2003 Owen Dixon profile The Miegunyah Press Melbourne University ISBN 0 522 85045 6 p 62 Kisch Egon Erwin 1885 1948 Australian Dictionary of Biography Canberra National Centre of Biography Australian National University 2006 ISBN 978 0 522 84459 7 ISSN 1833 7538 OCLC 70677943 Retrieved 18 December 2021 Clif Cary Cricket Controversy Test matches in Australia 1946 47 T Werner Laurie Ltd 1948 pp 3 4 Ray Robinson and Mike Coward England vs Australia 1932 1985 p 292 in E W Swanton ed Barclay s World of Cricket Willow 1986 E W Swanton Swanton in Australia with MCC 1946 1975 Fontana Collins 1975 pg 68 Dr Evatt Goes to San Francisco Museum of Australian Democracy at Old Parliament House 25 June 2015 Retrieved 4 August 2021 William Roger Louis The British Empire in the Middle East 1945 1951 pp 19 20 Oxford Clarendon Press 1984 Report on Petrov Affair Archived 17 October 2011 at the Wayback Machine moadoph gov au Robert Menzies profile Archived 13 November 2013 at the Wayback Machine National Archives of Australia Weeks Phillipa 2000 Owen Sir William Francis 1899 1972 Australian Dictionary of Biography Canberra National Centre of Biography Australian National University ISBN 978 0 522 84459 7 ISSN 1833 7538 OCLC 70677943 Retrieved 18 December 2021 Henderson Gerard 12 April 2005 Labor in denial about Evatt its flawed hero The Age Andrew Campbell 2007 Dr H V Evatt Part One A Question of Sanity National Observer 73 25 39 Kirby Michael Independence of the Judiciary Basic Principles New Challenges Retrieved 18 December 2021 Peter Evatt Wins Sculling Title The Canberra Times 16 February 1953 Retrieved 18 October 2020 via Trove Peter Evatt Found Dead The Age 27 December 1972 Notable Canberra Wedding The Age 30 November 1953 Advisory Council Members Built Environment UNSW Australia be unsw edu au 19 January 2006 Archived from the original on 29 March 2016 Retrieved 15 July 2016 Melbourne National Foundation for Australian Women and The University of Evatt Elizabeth Andreas Woman The Australian Women s Register www womenaustralia info Retrieved 18 December 2021 Clive Evatt King of the Plaintiffs Defamation Bar The Sydney Morning Herald 9 August 2018 Retrieved 18 October 2020 Michael Duffy Proof of history s rum deal Sydney Morning Herald 27 January 2006 Evatt Foundation Evatt labor net au Archived from the original on 2 November 2011 Retrieved 4 November 2011 BibliographyWake Valdemar Robert 2004 No Ribbons or Medals The story of Hereward an Australian counter espionage officer Mitcham South Australia Australia Jacobyte Books ISBN 1 74100 165 X ISBN 9781741001655 available from Digital Print South Australia Further reading Buckley Ken Dale Barbara and Reynolds Wayne Doc Evatt Cheshire Melbourne 1994 ISBN 0 582 87498 X Dalziel Allan Evatt The Enigma Lansdowne Press Melbourne 1967 Haigh Gideon The Brilliant Boy Doc Evatt and the Great Australian Dissent Simon and Schuster Sydney 2021 ISBN 9781760856113 Hogan Ashley Moving in the Open Daylight Doc Evatt an Australian at the United Nations Sydney University Press Sydney 2008 ISBN 9781920899288 Makin Norman Federal Labour Leaders Union Printing Sydney New South Wales 1961 pp 140 145 Murphy John Evatt A Life NewSouth Publishing Sydney 2016 ISBN 9781742234465 Renouf Alan Let Justice Be Done The Foreign Policy of Dr H V Evatt University of Queensland Press St Lucia Queensland 1983 ISBN 0 7022 1893 6 Tennant Kylie Evatt Politics and Justice Angus and Robertson Sydney 1970 ISBN 0 207 12533 3External linksWikimedia Commons has media related to Herbert Evatt Evatt Collection at Flinders University Library Newspaper clippings about H V Evatt in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW New South Wales Legislative AssemblyPreceded byRobert Stopford Member for Balmain 1925 1927 Served alongside Keegan Lane Quirk Stuart Robertson Succeeded byH V EvattPreceded byH V Evatt Tom Keegan Albert Lane John Quirk Robert Stuart Robertson Member for Balmain 1927 1930 Succeeded byJohn QuirkParliament of AustraliaPreceded byAlbert Lane Member for Barton 1940 1958 Succeeded byLen ReynoldsPreceded byRowley James Member for Hunter 1958 1960 Succeeded byBert JamesPolitical officesPreceded byBen Chifley Leader of the Opposition 1951 1960 Succeeded byArthur CalwellPreceded bySir Frederick Stewart Minister for External Affairs 1941 1949 Succeeded byPercy SpenderPreceded byBilly Hughes Attorney General of Australia 1941 1949 Succeeded byJohn SpicerParty political officesPreceded byFrank Forde Deputy Leader of the Australian Labor Party 1946 1951 Succeeded byArthur CalwellPreceded byBen Chifley Leader of the Australian Labor Party 1951 1960Diplomatic postsPreceded byJose Arce President of the United Nations General Assembly 1948 1949 Succeeded byCarlos P RomuloLegal officesPreceded bySir Kenneth Street Chief Justice of New South Wales 1960 1962 Succeeded bySir Leslie Herron