Bill Barnard

{{short description|New Zealand politician}}

{{EngvarB|date=April 2014}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2014}}

{{Infobox officeholder

| honorific-prefix = The Honourable

| name = Bill Barnard

| honorific-suffix = {{post-nominals|country=NZL|CBE|size=100%}}

| image = William Edward Barnard, 1925.jpg

| caption = Barnard in 1925

| order2 = 10th Speaker of the New Zealand House of Representatives

| primeminister2 = Michael Joseph Savage
Peter Fraser

| term_start2 = 25 March 1936

| term_end2 = 25 September 1943

| predecessor2 = Charles Statham

| successor2 = Bill Schramm

| constituency_MP3 = Napier

| parliament3 = New Zealand

| term_start3 = 14 November 1928

| term_end3 = 25 September 1943

| predecessor3 = John Mason

| successor3 = Tommy Armstrong

| birth_name = William Edward Barnard

| birth_date = {{Birth date|1886|01|29|df=y}}

| birth_place = Carterton, New Zealand

| death_date = {{Death date and age|1958|03|12|1886|01|29|df=y}}

| death_place = Auckland, New Zealand

| spouse =

| party = Labour
Democratic Labour Party

| nickname =

| allegiance = New Zealand Army

| branch =

| serviceyears = 1916–18

| rank = 10px Gunner

| unit =

| commands =

| battles = World War I

| awards =

}}

William Edward Barnard {{post-nominals|country=NZL|CBE}} (29 January 1886 – 12 March 1958) was a New Zealand lawyer, politician and parliamentary speaker. He was a member of Parliament from 1928 until 1943, and was its Speaker from 1936 till 1943. He was known for his association with John A. Lee, a prominent left-wing politician.

Early life

Barnard was born in Carterton, a town in the Wairarapa region.{{DNZB|Atkinson |Neill |4b5 |William Edward Barnard}} He studied law at Victoria University College, and became a lawyer in 1908. He eventually settled in Te Aroha, where he served on the borough council. In 1915, he travelled to the United Kingdom and joined the Royal Army Medical Corps to serve in World War I. After serving for a time in Egypt, he became a gunner in the Royal Field Artillery, serving in Palestine. Following World War I, he returned to New Zealand and resumed practice as a lawyer.

Parliamentary career

{{NZ parlbox header|nolist=true|align=left}}

{{NZ parlbox

|start = {{NZ election link year|1928}}

|end = 1931

|term = 23rd

|electorate = {{NZ electorate link|Napier}}

|party = New Zealand Labour Party

}}

{{NZ parlbox

|start = {{NZ election link year|1931}}

|end = 1935

|term = 24th

|electorate = Napier

|party = New Zealand Labour Party

}}

{{NZ parlbox

|start = {{NZ election link year|1935}}

|end = 1938

|term = 25th

|electorate = Napier

|party = New Zealand Labour Party

}}

{{NZ parlbox

|start = {{NZ election link year|1938}}

|end = 1940

|term = 26th

|electorate = Napier

|party = New Zealand Labour Party

}}

{{NZ parlbox allegiance

|start=1940

|end = 1943

|party=Democratic Labour Party (New Zealand)

}}

{{NZ parlbox footer}}

Becoming increasingly interested in left-wing politics, Barnard joined the young Labour Party in 1923. He was a good friend of John A. Lee, one of the more radical members of the Labour Party. Barnard rose quickly, being elected to the Labour Party's national executive in 1924. In the 1925 election, he was Labour's candidate in the Kaipara seat – the incumbent was Gordon Coates, the Prime Minister, and Barnard was unsuccessful. In the 1928 elections, he stood in the seat of Napier, and narrowly defeated the incumbent Reform Party MP.

In 1935, he was awarded the King George V Silver Jubilee Medal.{{cite news | url=http://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/cgi-bin/paperspast?a=d&cl=search&d=EP19350506.2.12 | title=Official jubilee medals | date=6 May 1935 | work= Evening Post | accessdate=2 July 2013 | page=4 }}

In the 1935 election, he was returned with a comfortable majority, perhaps assisted by his work in response to the Napier earthquake. When the Labour Party won power in 1935, many believed that he would be appointed Minister of Justice. In the end, however, this position was given to Rex Mason. Instead, Barnard was nominated as Speaker of the House. He was elected to this position in March 1936. In the {{NZ election link|1938}}, he was challenged in the {{NZ electorate link|Napier}} electorate by John Ormond of the National Party, but he won with a large majority.{{cite web

|title = The General Election, 1938

|url = http://atojs.natlib.govt.nz/cgi-bin/atojs?a=d&d=AJHR1939-I.2.3.2.36

|publisher = National Library

|accessdate = 8 February 2012

|page = 3

|year = 1939

}}

Politically, Barnard was on the left of the Labour Party, and was strongly influenced by the social credit theory of monetary reform. He was also a strong Anglican, and considered himself to be a Christian socialist. Barnard became known as one of the senior members of the left-leaning, creditist faction of the party, although his old friend John A. Lee was the faction's de facto leader. As Lee's relationship with the Labour Party leadership deteriorated, Barnard sided with Lee. Lee was eventually expelled, and after Peter Fraser, an opponent of Lee, was elected leader on 4 April 1940, Barnard himself resigned from the party.

File:Bill Barnard, speaker.jpg

Barnard then assisted Lee in the launch of the new Democratic Labour Party, becoming one of its two MPs. Despite his departure from the governing party, he retained the office of Speaker. Soon, however, Barnard became dissatisfied with Lee's style of leadership, considering it to be egotistical and autocratic. Rather than seek re-election as a Democratic Labour Party candidate, he opted to stand as an independent, but was defeated.

Later life

Following his departure from Parliament, Barnard returned to law, setting up a legal practice in Tauranga. In 1950, he became mayor, serving for two years. The workload of his mayoral duties combined with those of his legal practice had begun to negatively affect his health and he resigned before the completion of the term necessitating a by-election.{{cite news |url=https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/CHP19520718.2.48 |title=Personal Items |work=The Press |volume=LXXXVIII |issue=26786 |date=18 July 1952 |page=6 }}

Barnard also undertook considerable work with various non-profit organisations, including the Society for Closer Relations with the USSR (Russia), the Institute of Pacific Relations's New Zealand branch, the New Zealand Five Million Club (promoting population growth), and the New Zealand Council for the Adoption of Chinese Refugee Children. For the latter, he was awarded the Order of the Brilliant Star by the government of the Republic of China. In 1953, he was awarded the Queen Elizabeth II Coronation Medal.{{cite news |url=http://www.nzlii.org/nz/other/nz_gazette/1953/37.pdf |title=Coronation Medal |work=Supplement to the New Zealand Gazette |issue=37 |date=3 July 1953 |access-date=14 April 2021 |pages=1021–1035}} In the 1957 New Year Honours, he was appointed a Commander of the Order of the British Empire, for political and public services.{{London Gazette |issue=40962 |date=28 December 1956 |pages=45–47 |supp=y}}

Barnard died in Auckland on 12 March 1958.

References

{{Reflist}}

Further reading

{{commons category}}

  • {{citation |first = W. E. |last = Barnard |title = This socialism |place = Napier, [N.Z.] |publisher = Swailes Print |year = 1938}}
  • {{citation |first = W. E. |last = Barnard |title = World challenge to Christianity |place = Auckland, [N.Z.] |publisher = Auckland Service Print |date = c. 1941}}
  • {{citation |first = Martin |last = Collins |title = This is the house that Hamilton built! |place = Auckland, [N.Z.] |publisher = Better Business |year = 1944}}
  • {{citation |first1 = John A. |last1 = Lee |first2 = William E. |last2 = Barnard |first3 = William J. |last3 = Jordan |title = Returned soldiers vote Labour! |place = Wellington, [N.Z.] |publisher = New Zealand Worker |year = 1935}}

{{s-start}}

{{S-par | nz}}

{{s-bef | before = John Mason}}

{{s-ttl | title = Member of Parliament for Napier|years=1928–1943}}

{{s-aft| after = Tommy Armstrong }}

{{s-off}}

{{succession box | before=Charles Statham | title=Speaker of the New Zealand House of Representatives | years=1936–1943 | after=Bill Schramm}}

{{s-bef|before=Lionel Roberts Wilkinson}}

{{s-ttl|title=Mayor of Tauranga|years=1950–1952}}

{{s-aft|after=Lionel Roberts Wilkinson}}

{{end}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:Barnard, Bill}}

Category:New Zealand Labour Party MPs

Category:Independent MPs of New Zealand

Category:New Zealand Commanders of the Order of the British Empire

Category:Speakers of the New Zealand House of Representatives

Category:New Zealand MPs for North Island electorates

Category:20th-century New Zealand lawyers

Category:British Army personnel of World War I

Category:Victoria University of Wellington alumni

Category:People from Carterton, New Zealand

Category:Mayors of Tauranga

Category:1886 births

Category:1958 deaths

Category:Democratic Labour Party (New Zealand) politicians

Category:Members of the New Zealand House of Representatives

Category:Unsuccessful candidates in the 1943 New Zealand general election

Category:Unsuccessful candidates in the 1925 New Zealand general election

Category:Royal Army Medical Corps soldiers

Category:Royal Field Artillery soldiers