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Bob Semple

New Zealand politician (1873–1955)


New Zealand politician (1873–1955)

FieldValue
honorific-prefixThe Honourable
nameBob Semple
imageBob Semple, 1935.jpg
captionBob Semple in 1935
order121st Minister of Public Works
term_start18 November 1942
term_end113 December 1949
primeminister1Peter Fraser
predecessor1Tim Armstrong
successor1Stan Goosman
term_start26 December 1935
term_end221 January 1941
primeminister2Michael Joseph Savage
Peter Fraser
predecessor2John Bitchener
successor2Tim Armstrong
order314th Minister of Railways
term_start312 December 1941
term_end313 December 1949
predecessor3Dan Sullivan
successor3Stan Goosman
primeminister3Peter Fraser
office6Member of the New Zealand Parliament
for
(1928–1946)
term_start614 November 1928
term_end613 November 1954
predecessor6Thomas Forsyth
successor6Bill Fox
office77th President of the Labour Party
term_start77 April 1926
term_end712 April 1928
leader7Harry Holland
vicepresident7Jim Thorn (1926-7)
John Archer (1927-8)
predecessor7Tom Brindle
successor7John Archer
constituency_MP8Wellington South
parliament8New Zealand
term_start819 December 1918
term_end817 December 1919
predecessor8Alfred Hindmarsh
successor8George Mitchell
birth_date21 October 1873
birth_placeSofala, New South Wales, Australia
death_date
death_placeNew Plymouth, New Zealand
partyLabour
otherparty
spouseMargaret Semple

|honorific-prefix = The Honourable |honorific-suffix = Peter Fraser for (1928–1946) John Archer (1927-8) Robert Semple (21 October 1873 – 31 January 1955) was a union leader and later Minister of Public Works for the first Labour Government of New Zealand. He is also known for creating the Bob Semple tank.

Early life

Semple was born in Sofala, New South Wales, Australia. He started working at an early age as gold miner in Australia. In 1903 he was involved in a miner's strike in Victoria, Australia. The strike was defeated and Semple ended up being blacklisted.

To avoid the blacklist Semple moved to the West Coast of the South Island of New Zealand. By 1907 he was president of the Runanga Miner's Union and earned himself nickname 'Fighting Bob Semple'.

He was jailed in 1913 for supporting the general strike and again in 1916 after fighting conscription for overseas service during World War I. Semple served as the President of the Labour Party from 1926 to 1928.

Semple was a member of the Wellington City Council for a decade between 1925 and 1935. In 1935 he unsuccessfully stood for Mayor of Wellington, coming runner-up to Thomas Hislop. His wife Margaret was also a Wellington City Councillor from 1938 to 1941.

Parliamentary career

Semple was elected to the seat of Wellington South Parliament for Labour in a 1918 by-election, but lost the seat in the 1919 general election. In 1928 he won the Wellington East seat, and held it until 1946, when it was renamed Miramar. He then held Miramar until 1954, when he retired.

In 1935, he was awarded the King George V Silver Jubilee Medal. Semple was a prolific user of "unparliamentary language" during his time as an MP, and was fond of insulting colleagues by calling or comparing them to Australian animals such as kookaburras, kangaroos and dingoes.

During his term in Parliament, Semple held many important infrastructure portfolios, such as Minister of Public Works (1935–1941, 1942–1943) and Minister of Railways (1941–1949). Semple was seen by many as the public face of the first Labour government's infrastructure investment. He reshaped the Public Works Department by resuming its original function as the development arm of the government by phasing out its focus on relief work from the Great Depression.

During World War II he had built the 'Bob Semple tank', made from corrugated iron and a tractor base. The tank had numerous design flaws and other practical problems and was never put into production. In later life, he became an ardent anti-communist. In 1953, Semple was awarded the Queen Elizabeth II Coronation Medal. He did not seek re-election in the 1954 election, and died in New Plymouth in January 1955.

Notes

References

References

  1. Richardson, Len. "Semple, Robert".
  2. Paul, J.T.. (1946). "Humanism in Politics: New Zealand Labour Party in Retrospect". New Zealand Worker Printing and Publishing.
  3. (10 May 1935). "Polling in Wellington". [[The New Zealand Herald]].
  4. ''Wellington: Biography of a city'' by Redmer Yska (Reed, Auckland, 2006) page 159 {{ISBN. 0-7900-1117-4
  5. (6 May 1935). "Official jubilee medals". [[The Evening Post (New Zealand).
  6. Dooney, Laura. (7 December 2016). "PhD research highlights unparliamentary language in New Zealand". [[Stuff (website).
  7. (1994). "Honoured by the Queen – New Zealand". New Zealand Who's Who Aotearoa.
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