Alick Downer
Minister for Immigration
In office
19 March 1958  18 December 1963
Prime MinisterRobert Menzies
Preceded byAthol Townley
Succeeded byHubert Opperman
High Commissioner to the United Kingdom
In office
25 October 1964  24 October 1972
Preceded byEric Harrison
Succeeded byJohn Armstrong
Member of the Australian Parliament
for Angas
In office
10 December 1949  23 April 1964
Preceded byNew seat
Succeeded byGeoffrey Giles
Personal details
Born
Alexander Russell Downer

(1910-04-07)7 April 1910
North Adelaide, South Australia, Australia
Died30 March 1981(1981-03-30) (aged 70)
Tanunda, South Australia, Australia
Political partyLiberal Party of Australia
Spouse
(m. 1947)
Children4 (including Alexander Downer)
Parent(s)John William Downer and Una Stella Haslingden Downer (née Russell)
ResidenceArbury Park, South Australia
Alma materUniversity of Oxford
ProfessionBarrister
Military service
AllegianceAustralia
Branch/serviceSecond Australian Imperial Force
Years of service1940–1945
RankSergeant
Unit2/14th Field Regiment
Battles/warsSecond World War

Sir Alexander Russell "Alick" Downer KBE (7 April 1910 – 30 March 1981) was an Australian politician and diplomat. He was a member of the House of Representatives between 1949 and 1963, representing the Liberal Party, and served as Minister for Immigration in the Menzies Government. He was later High Commissioner to the United Kingdom from 1963 to 1972.

Family, early life and career

Downer was born in Adelaide as a member of the influential Downer family. His father, Sir John Downer, was a Premier of South Australia and a member of the Australian Senate.[1] His mother was Una Russell, daughter of Henry Chamberlain Russell, who remarried when Alick was eight, to D’Arcy Wentworth Addison.[2][3] Sir Alick's son, Alexander Downer, also a Liberal politician, was Leader of the Opposition 1994–95 and Foreign Minister of Australia 1996–2007.

He was educated at Geelong Grammar School and at the University of Oxford, where he graduated in economics and political science. He was the godfather of Charles Spencer, 9th Earl Spencer, brother of Diana, Princess of Wales. The Earl's godmother was Queen Elizabeth II.

After graduating from Oxford in 1932 he read law in London, and in 1934 he was admitted to the bar at Inner Temple. Returning to Adelaide, he joined the South Australian Bar in 1935. He practised as a barrister until joining the Australian Army in 1940. He served in Malaya and was a prisoner-of-war for three years,[4] where he set up a camp library and gave lessons to other prisoners. He was promoted to sergeant due to these efforts, but the promotion was not recognised upon his release.[5]

His book Six prime ministers (Robert Menzies, John Gorton, Harold Holt, Harold Wilson, Edward Heath, Basil Brooke, 1st Viscount Brookeborough) was published in 1982.[6]

Political career

Downer in 1958.

After the war, Downer joined the newly formed Liberal Party of Australia, and in 1949 he was elected to the House of Representatives for the rural-based Division of Angas. By invitation of the premier, Thomas Playford, he joined the board of the Electricity Trust of South Australia for three years and the Art Gallery board where he remained for seventeen years until his appointment as High Commissioner.[7] He served as Minister for Immigration from 1958 to 1963. One of his first acts was to oversee the passage of the Migration Act 1958,[8] which replaced the earlier Immigration Restriction Act 1901 that had formed the basis of the White Australia policy. During his term in office, reforms to migration laws led to the arrival of hundreds of thousands of migrants, mostly from Britain and Europe, where new recruitment posts had been created. Many refugees were also accepted. As a result of his experience as a prisoner of war, he arranged for non-criminal deportees to be held in detention centres instead of being sent to jail.[9]

Diplomatic career

He retired from Parliament upon his appointment as Australian High Commissioner in London,[10] a position he held until 1972. The building of the High Commission, Australia House, has a Downer Room on the first floor, named in his honour.[11] Downer was appointed a Knight Commander of the Order of the British Empire in the 1965 Birthday Honours.[12] He was made a Freeman of the City of London in 1965.

Downer actively lobbied both the prime minister, William McMahon, and the British government directly, for a peerage of the UK Parliament. McMahon wrote to 10 Downing Street with a proposal, but it was declined. Downer was reportedly "very bitter" about this rejection.[13]

Personal life

On 23 April 1947, he married Mary Gosse, daughter of Sir James Gosse, whom he had met at a cocktail party in Adelaide.[14] Together they had four children, Stella Mary (born 1948), Angela (born 1949), Alexander Downer (born 1951), who would later serve as the leader of the Liberal Party (1994 to 1995) and Minister for Foreign Affairs under the Howard government, and Una Joanna (born 1955).

Arbury Park

In 1932,[15] Downer bought the property known as Raywood in the Adelaide Hills, which he renamed Arbury Park after Arbury Hall, near Nuneaton, Warwickshire where his friends the Newdigate family lived. He was responsible for the construction of the large Georgian mansion and extensive formal gardens and deer park,[16] "which was important to his concept of the property as an English estate". The property, after reversion to its former name when bought by the state government in 1965, is heritage-listed.[17]

Electoral history

Federal

House of Representatives

Election year Electorate Party Votes FP% 2PP% Result
1949 Angas Liberal 23,987 60.8% Increase 8.9 63.1% Increase 8.1 First
1951 25,323 63.9% Increase 3.1 63.9% Increase 3.1 First
1954
unopposed
1955 26,823 70.0% Decrease 30.0 72.2% Decrease 27.8% First
1958 23,987 61.4% Decrease 8.6 67.7% Decrease 4.5 First
1961 22,798 56.7% Decrease 4.7 61.6% Decrease 6.1 First
1963 25,676 61.9% Increase 5.2 62.2% Increase 0.6 First

See also

References

  1. Downer, Sir Alexander Russell (Alick) (1910–1981). Australian National University. Retrieved 30 May 2012. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  2. "Interesting Weddings". Sunday Times (Sydney, NSW : 1895–1930). Sydney, NSW: National Library of Australia. 2 March 1919. p. 2. Retrieved 3 February 2016.
  3. Downer, Alick (2012). The Downers of South Australia, p. 114. Wakefield Press, Adelaide. ISBN 9781743051993
  4. AUSTRALIAN PRISONERS of WAR – World War 2
  5. Downer, Alick (2012). The Downers of South Australia, p. 123. Wakefield Press, Adelaide. ISBN 9781743051993
  6. Downer, Alexander (1982). Six prime ministers. Melbourne: Hill of Content. p. 324. ISBN 0855721294.
  7. Downer, Alick (2012). The Downers of South Australia, p. 124. Wakefield Press, Adelaide. ISBN 9781743051993
  8. "Migration Bill 1958". Hansard. Parliament of Australia. 1 May 1958.
  9. Hancock, I.R. (2007). "Downer, Sir Alexander Russell (Alick) (1910–1981)". Downer, Sir Alexander (Alick), 1910–1981. National Centre of Biography, Australian National University. Retrieved 2 May 2014. {{cite book}}: |website= ignored (help)
  10. "A journey into Downer's dark past". The Sydney Morning Herald. 1 June 2005.
  11. "Australia House, The Strand, London, OS, United Kingdom". Australian Heritage Database. 2014. Retrieved 2 May 2014.
  12. "No. 43668". The London Gazette (Supplement). 4 June 1965. p. 5508.
  13. Anne Twomey, "Defacing the record - how Archives black out history", Weekend Australian, 22-23 January 2022, Inquirer, p. 16
  14. Downer, Alick (2012). The Downers of South Australia, p. 125. Wakefield Press, Adelaide. ISBN 9781743051993
  15. "Real Estate News". The Mail (Adelaide). Vol. 20, no. 1, 038. South Australia. 16 April 1932. p. 5 (Women's Section). Retrieved 31 October 2023 via National Library of Australia.
  16. Oats, Sydney; South Australian Heritage (12 May 2010). "The Mansion Adelaide Hills 1969". Flickr. Retrieved 31 October 2021. Info Courtesy of South Australian Heritage. Album
  17. "Heritage details: Dwelling ('Raywood', previously 'Arbury Park') Garden, Chapel, Driveway and Gates". SA Heritage Places Database Search. Retrieved 31 October 2021. Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0) licence.
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