On a political level, Ben Chifley is a Labor icon who vies with John Curtin for the top place in the party's pantheon of heroes. But like Curtin, he was admired across political boundaries. As prime minister from 1945-49, he established many of the policies that became an accepted part of Australian life: mass immigration, full employment, the Snowy Mountains Scheme, to name just a few. In contrast to our age of privatisation and economic rationalism, Chifley stood for a strong state sector able to moderate the excesses of capitalism. However, Chifley's personal life had melancholic resonances. In his early childhood he was sent from his parents' house to live a primitive rural life with his grandfather. His marriage was childless, to his bitter regret, and he was involved for much of it with another woman in whose company he was destined to die. Chifley is a gripping and essential political biography from David Day, author of John Curtin: A Life and winner of the 2000 Queensland Premier's Prize for History. ∗ Winner Queensland Premier's Prize for History 2000
David Day has written widely on Australian history and the history of World War II. His biography of John Curtin won the 2000 Queensland Premier’s Literary Awards Prize for History and was shortlisted for the 2000 New South Wales Premier’s Literary Awards Douglas Stewart Prize for Non-Fiction, while his biography of Ben Chifley was shortlisted for the New South Wales Premier’s Award for History in 2002. David Day is currently an Honorary Associate with the History Program at La Trobe University and a visiting professor at the University of Aberdeen. He lives in Eltham, Victoria.
1986: Menzies and Churchill at War 1988: The Great Betrayal: Britain, Australia and the Onset of the Pacific War, 1939-42 1992: Reluctant Nation: Australia and the Allied Defeat of Japan, 1942-45 1992: Smugglers and Sailors: The Customs History of Australia, 1788-1901 1996: Contraband and Controversy: The Customs History of Australia from 1901 1996: Claiming a Continent: A New History of Australia 1999: John Curtin: A Life 2001: Chifley 2003: The Politics of War 2005: Conquest: A New History of the Modern World - ISBN 0732277655 2007: The Weather Watchers - ISBN 9780522852752 2008: Andrew Fisher: Prime Minister of Australia
Something I like about this book - and which is also true of the same author's biography of John Curtin - is that it doesn't give a great deal of special weight to Chifley's time as prime minister, at least as far as page count is concerned. Where most biographers would dedicate the bulk of the book to Chifley's role in the commonwealth Labor government of 1941 to 1949, first as wartime treasurer and then as prime minister, Day has looked at the complete man. This is a biography in the true sense of the word, rather than just being an account of a couple of jobs the subject held with a few childhood anecdotes sprinkled at the start. Very good, I thought.
A very good read. Was great learning about his background and all the details that lead to him becoming PM. However it felt as though it was balanced too far that way. And then a few chapters crammed in at the end were on his considerable (by modern standards) time as PM.
An outstanding biography of one of Australia's political heroes. Even those who didn't share his political beliefs admired Chifley: he was humble, hard-working and a visionary. But it's not a hagiography: Day reveals the flaws as well the man's achievements. Highly recommended.