Robert Masters (New Zealand politician)

{{Short description|New Zealand politician}}

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

{{Use New Zealand English|date=August 2014}}

{{Infobox officeholder

|honorific-prefix = The Honourable

|name = Robert Masters

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

|image = Robert Masters, 1922.jpg

|caption =

|order = 14th Minister of Industries and Commerce

|term_start = 22 September 1931

|term_end = 6 December 1935

|primeminister = George Forbes

|predecessor = Philip De La Perrelle

|successor = Dan Sullivan

|order1 = 20th Minister of Education

|term_start1 = 22 September 1931

|term_end1 = 22 November 1934

|primeminister1 = George Forbes

|predecessor1 = Harry Atmore

|successor1 = Sydney George Smith

|order2 = Member of the Legislative Council

|term_start2 = 11 June 1930

|term_end2 = 10 June 1937

|appointer2 = George Forbes

|constituency_MP3 = Stratford

|parliament3 = New Zealand

|term_start3 = 17 December 1919

|term_end3 = 4 November 1925

|predecessor3 = John Bird Hine

|successor3 = Edward Walter

|birth_date = {{Birth date|1879|06|15|df=y}}

|birth_place = Greymouth, New Zealand

|death_date = {{Death date and age|1967|06|29|1879|06|15|df=y}}

|death_place = Stratford, New Zealand

|party = United Party (after 1928)

|otherparty = Liberal (until 1928)

|spouse = {{marriage|Alice Gertrude Hopkins|1906|1962|end=d}}

|relations =

|children = 3

|occupation = Retailer

|profession =

|religion =

|signature =

}}

Robert Masters {{post-nominals|country=NZL|CMG}} (15 June 1879 – 29 June 1967) was a New Zealand politician of the Liberal and later United parties, as well as a cabinet minister.

Biography

=Early life and career=

Masters was born in 1879 at Greymouth and was educated at Greymouth Boys' College. Around 1896 he moved to Stratford where he became a storekeeper with his father, Jonas Masters. He played representative rugby, and later, was a member of the Taranaki Rugby Football Union, executive. Masters was also a member of the executive of the Stratford Chamber of Commerce.{{cite news |url=https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/EP19191218.2.153 |title=Mr. R. Masters |date=18 December 1919 |work=The Evening Post |volume=XCVIII |issue=146 |page=10 }} On 3 May 1906 he was married to Alice Gertrude Hopkins in Stratford.{{cite news |url=https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/TDN19060504.2.6 |title=Wedding at Stratford - Masters-Hopkins |date=4 May 1906 |work=Taranaki Daily News |volume=XLVII |issue=8101 |page=2 }} Interested in agricultural matters, he was a member of Stratford's Agricultural and pastoral Association of which he had been both president and treasurer. He helped set up the Stratford model farm and later a member of its executive. Masters was chairman of directors of the Stratford Electric Lighting Company, until it entered the ownership of the Stratford Borough Council.

=Political career=

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

{{NZ parlbox

|start = {{NZ election link year|1919}}

|end = 1920

|term = 20th

|electorate = {{NZ electorate link|Stratford}}

|party = New Zealand Liberal Party

}}

{{NZ parlbox

|start = {{By-election link year|Stratford|1920}}

|end = 1922

|term = 20th

|electorate = Stratford

|party = New Zealand Liberal Party

}}

{{NZ parlbox

|start = {{NZ election link year|1922}}

|end = 1925

|term = 21st

|electorate = Stratford

|party = New Zealand Liberal Party

}}

{{NZ parlbox footer}}

Masters entered politics via local government. In 1916 he was elected a member of the Taranaki Board of Education, and became its chairman by the end of the same year.

Masters represented the Taranaki electorate of Stratford from {{NZ election link year|1919}} for the Liberal Party; though the result was declared void in the following year, he won the subsequent {{By-election link|Stratford|1920}}.{{sfn|Wilson|1985|p=219}} Masters was a personal friend of Liberal Party leader George Forbes and the two went for daily walks together. He took on a mentoring role with Forbes for which he was mockingly dubbed 'His Master's Voice'.{{DNZB|last=Gardner|first=W. J.|id=3f9|title=Forbes, George William – Biography|access-date=11 December 2011}} He was defeated by Edward Walter in 1925.{{sfn|Wilson|1985|p=243}} After losing his seat he remained politically active and was involved in setting up the United Party, which succeeded the Liberal Party in 1928. Notably he was the chairman of the September 1928 convention in Wellington that launched the party's formal existence, decided its policies and where delegates elected former Prime Minister Sir Joseph Ward as its leader. He also negotiated successfully to bring about co-operation with several independent MPs and candidates (such as Harry Atmore, William Polson and Charles Wilkinson) to support the United Party in the house.{{sfn|Bassett|1993|p=263}}

Masters was appointed to the New Zealand Legislative Council on 11 June 1930 and served for one seven-year term.{{sfn|Wilson|1985|p=159}} When Ward retired as Prime Minister his successor, Forbes, added Masters to the cabinet on 20 August 1930 as a Minister without portfolio.{{sfn|Bassett|1993|p=263}} In the Forbes Ministry, he was a Member of the Executive Council without portfolio from 1930 to 1931. When the United and Reform Party decided on entering in to a coalition, Forbes relied on Masters heavily for support during the tense negotiations that created the United-Reform Coalition government in 1931. In the coalition government, he was both Minister of Education and Minister of Industries and Commerce.{{sfn|Wilson|1985|p=81}} At the {{NZ election link|1931}} he was the United Party's campaign chairman. He was frequently called on to resolve selection disputes as part of the coalition agreement with Reform was to not oppose each others MPs. He had to work with the Reform leadership to make sure that in as many electorates as possible there was only one "anti-Labour" candidate to avoid vote splitting.{{cite book |last= Bassett |first= Michael |title= Three Party Politics in New Zealand 1911–1931 |author-link=Michael Bassett |year= 1982 |publisher=Historical Publications |location= Auckland |isbn= 0-86870-006-1 |page=61 }}

In 1935, Masters 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 |volume=CXIX |issue=105 |work=The Evening Post |access-date=11 January 2016 |page=4 }} In the 1953 Coronation Honours, he was appointed a Companion of the Order of St Michael and St George, for public services.{{London Gazette |issue=39866 |date=1 June 1953 |page=3003 |supp=4}}

=Later life and death=

In 1957 he was appointed to the Electricity and Gas Co-ordination Board by the first National government.{{cite news |url=https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/CHP19570921.2.156 |title=Electricity and Gas - Co-ordination Board Appointed |date=21 September 1957 |work=The Press |volume=XCVI |issue=28388 |page=14 }} He was also the patron of the New Zealand Federation of Wholesale Hardware Guilds.{{cite news |url=https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/CHP19670316.2.115 |title=Change Sought in Import Control |date=16 March 1967 |work=The Press |volume=CVI |issue=31320 |page=13 }}

He died in Stratford on 29 June 1967, aged 88.{{cite news |url=https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/CHP19670630.2.32 |title=Former Cabinet Minister Dies |date=30 June 1967 |work=The Press |volume=CVII |issue=31409 |page=3 }} His wife had predeceased him on 27 May 1962.{{cite news |url=https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/CHP19620528.2.4.1 |title=Deaths |date=28 May 1962 |work=The Press |volume=CI |issue=29833 |page=1 }}

Notes

{{Reflist}}

References

{{commons category}}

  • {{cite book | last=Bassett | first=Michael |author-link=Michael Bassett | title=Sir Joseph Ward: A Political Biography | publisher=Auckland University Press | location=Auckland | year=1993 |isbn=9781869400798 }}
  • {{cite book |last= Wilson |first= James Oakley |title= New Zealand parliamentary record, 1840–1984 |edition= 4 |orig-year= First ed. published 1913 |year= 1985 |publisher= V.R. Ward, Govt. Printer |location= Wellington |oclc= 154283103}}

{{s-start}}

{{s-par|nz}}

{{s-bef|before=John Bird Hine}}

{{s-ttl|title=Member of Parliament for Stratford|years=1919–1925}}

{{s-aft|after= Edward Walter}}

{{s-off}}

{{s-bef | before = Harry Atmore}}

{{s-ttl | title = Minister of Education |years=1931–1934}}

{{s-aft | after = Sydney Smith}}

{{s-bef | before = Philip De La Perrelle}}

{{s-ttl | title = Minister of Industries and Commerce |years=1931–1935}}

{{s-aft | after = Dan Sullivan}}

{{end}}

{{authority control}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:Masters, Robert}}

Category:1879 births

Category:1967 deaths

Category:New Zealand Liberal Party MPs

Category:Members of the Cabinet of New Zealand

Category:Members of the New Zealand Legislative Council

Category:People from Taranaki

Category:New Zealand Liberal Party MLCs

Category:Ministers of education of New Zealand

Category:Members of the New Zealand House of Representatives

Category:New Zealand MPs for North Island electorates

Category:New Zealand Companions of the Order of St Michael and St George

Category:Unsuccessful candidates in the 1925 New Zealand general election

{{NewZealand-Liberal-politician-stub}}