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- Charles_Powers abstract "Sir Charles Powers KCMG (3 March 1853 – 24 April 1939), Australian politician and judge, was a Justice of the High Court of Australia from 1913 to 1929.Powers was born in 1853 in Brisbane, Queensland. He was educated at Ipswich Grammar School and Brisbane Grammar School captaining the Schools First XI. He was a talented sportsman, and at one point captained a state cricket team against a touring English side. After completing his articles of clerkship, Powers was admitted to practise law as a solicitor in 1876, after which he moved to Bundaberg to practise. In 1878, he married Kate Ann Thorburn, whose father was a solicitor from Victoria. Powers continued to work in Bundaberg until 1882, and in 1883 became the mayor of Maryborough.In June 1888, Powers was elected to the Parliament of Queensland as a member of the Legislative Assembly of Queensland for Burrum. On 19 November 1889, Powers became Postmaster-General and Minister for Education in the ministry of Premier Boyd Dunlop Morehead, and he held these positions until resigning with his colleagues in August 1890. In 1891 he was a member of a Royal Commission which was established to investigate the possibility of establishing a university in Queensland.Powers was admitted to practice as a barrister at the Queensland bar in 1894, although since he was still in parliament at the time, he did not actually practice. From 1894 to 1895, Powers was the leader of the opposition in Queensland. During this time, he put forward an electoral reform bill which provided for women's suffrage, and the abolition of plural voting, however the bill did not succeed. If it had, Queensland would have become the second Australian colony after South Australia to allow women to vote. An industrial relations bill brought by Powers also failed.From 1899 to 1903, Powers served as the Crown Solicitor for Queensland, and in 1903, he was appointed as the first Commonwealth Crown Solicitor. During this time, he conducted several appeals on behalf of the recently formed Federal Government to the Privy Council, where he argued many significant constitutional issues. He played a key role in preparing the prosecution in the Coal Vend cases, arising out of prosecutions brought by then Attorney-General of Australia Billy Hughes against a coal industry cartel. The case was successful at first instance, but was lost on appeals to the full High Court and to the Privy Council.Nevertheless, Hughes was pleased with Powers' work, and Hughes's opinion was undoubtedly influential when the Fisher government appointed Powers to the High Court of Australia in 1913. Powers was the only solicitor to be appointed, and remains the only Justice (with the exception of the initial three) to have not argued a case before the court. He was also the first Justice appointed without a university degree. Powers was one of two justices of the Court to have previously served in the Parliament of Queensland, along with Samuel Griffith.The appointment of Powers, along with the concurrent appointment of Albert Piddington, were highly controversial. The press considered the two appointees to be insufficiently qualified, and both were criticised for their lack of expertise and experience. There was also controversy arising from Hughes' desire to appoint judges who would be sympathetic to interpreting the power of the Parliament of Australia broadly. Piddington caused the most public outrage for stating his sympathies in a telegram, although Powers had actually prepared many of the arguments Hughes would wish him to uphold on the bench.While Piddington ultimately resigned, Powers persevered, and remained on the High Court. Later in 1913 he was made Deputy President of the Commonwealth Court of Conciliation and Arbitration under Justice Higgins, leaving the court on 30 April 1920. He was reappointed as Deputy President on 12 February 1921 and ultimately succeeded Higgins as President on 30 June. As President, Powers introduced the first system of automatic adjustments to the basic wage to account for changes in the cost of living, applied quarterly. He finally left the Arbitration Court on 25 June 1926.Powers was created a Knight Commander of the Order of St Michael and St George (KCMG) in 1929, and on 22 July that year resigned from the High Court. Powers died in Melbourne in 1939 and was buried in Burwood Cemetery.".
- Charles_Powers activeYearsEndDate "1893-04-29".
- Charles_Powers activeYearsEndDate "1896-03-21".
- Charles_Powers activeYearsEndDate "1929-07-22".
- Charles_Powers activeYearsStartDate "1888-05-12".
- Charles_Powers activeYearsStartDate "1893-04-29".
- Charles_Powers activeYearsStartDate "1913-03-05".
- Charles_Powers birthDate "1853-03-03".
- Charles_Powers birthName "Charles Powers".
- Charles_Powers birthPlace Australia.
- Charles_Powers birthPlace Brisbane.
- Charles_Powers birthPlace Queensland.
- Charles_Powers birthYear "1853".
- Charles_Powers deathDate "1939-04-24".
- Charles_Powers deathPlace Australia.
- Charles_Powers deathPlace Melbourne.
- Charles_Powers deathPlace Victoria_(Australia).
- Charles_Powers deathYear "1939".
- Charles_Powers nationality Australia.
- Charles_Powers occupation High_Court_of_Australia.
- Charles_Powers office "Queensland Legislative".
- Charles_Powers orderInOffice "Justice of the High Court of Australia".
- Charles_Powers party Opposition_(Australia).
- Charles_Powers region Electoral_district_of_Burrum.
- Charles_Powers region Electoral_district_of_Maryborough.
- Charles_Powers religion Church_of_England.
- Charles_Powers restingPlace Burwood_Cemetery.
- Charles_Powers successor H._V._Evatt.
- Charles_Powers successor John_Bartholomew_(Australian_politician).
- Charles_Powers successor Nicholas_Tooth.
- Charles_Powers thumbnail Charlespowers.jpg?width=300.
- Charles_Powers wikiPageExternalLink powers1.
- Charles_Powers wikiPageID "1774132".
- Charles_Powers wikiPageLength "9600".
- Charles_Powers wikiPageOutDegree "91".
- Charles_Powers wikiPageRevisionID "674644531".
- Charles_Powers wikiPageWikiLink Albert_Piddington.
- Charles_Powers wikiPageWikiLink Andrew_Fisher.
- Charles_Powers wikiPageWikiLink Articled_clerk.
- Charles_Powers wikiPageWikiLink Attorney-General_for_Australia.
- Charles_Powers wikiPageWikiLink Attorney-General_of_Australia.
- Charles_Powers wikiPageWikiLink Australia.
- Charles_Powers wikiPageWikiLink Australian_Constitution.
- Charles_Powers wikiPageWikiLink Australian_Government_Solicitor.
- Charles_Powers wikiPageWikiLink Bar_Association_of_Queensland.
- Charles_Powers wikiPageWikiLink Barrister.
- Charles_Powers wikiPageWikiLink Basic_wage.
- Charles_Powers wikiPageWikiLink Bill_(law).
- Charles_Powers wikiPageWikiLink Bill_(proposed_law).
- Charles_Powers wikiPageWikiLink Billy_Hughes.
- Charles_Powers wikiPageWikiLink Boyd_Dunlop_Morehead.
- Charles_Powers wikiPageWikiLink Brisbane.
- Charles_Powers wikiPageWikiLink Brisbane_Grammar_School.
- Charles_Powers wikiPageWikiLink Bundaberg.
- Charles_Powers wikiPageWikiLink Bundaberg,_Queensland.
- Charles_Powers wikiPageWikiLink Burwood_Cemetery.
- Charles_Powers wikiPageWikiLink Cartel.
- Charles_Powers wikiPageWikiLink Category:1853_births.
- Charles_Powers wikiPageWikiLink Category:1939_deaths.
- Charles_Powers wikiPageWikiLink Category:Australian_Knights_Commander_of_the_Order_of_St_Michael_and_St_George.
- Charles_Powers wikiPageWikiLink Category:Justices_of_the_High_Court_of_Australia.
- Charles_Powers wikiPageWikiLink Category:Mayors_of_places_in_Queensland.
- Charles_Powers wikiPageWikiLink Category:Members_of_the_Queensland_Legislative_Assembly.
- Charles_Powers wikiPageWikiLink Category:People_from_Brisbane.
- Charles_Powers wikiPageWikiLink Category:People_from_Maryborough,_Queensland.
- Charles_Powers wikiPageWikiLink Church_of_England.
- Charles_Powers wikiPageWikiLink Coal_Vend_cases.
- Charles_Powers wikiPageWikiLink Commonwealth_Court_of_Conciliation_and_Arbitration.
- Charles_Powers wikiPageWikiLink Commonwealth_Crown_Solicitor.
- Charles_Powers wikiPageWikiLink Constitution_of_Australia.
- Charles_Powers wikiPageWikiLink Cricket.
- Charles_Powers wikiPageWikiLink Electoral_district_of_Burrum.
- Charles_Powers wikiPageWikiLink Electoral_district_of_Maryborough.
- Charles_Powers wikiPageWikiLink England.
- Charles_Powers wikiPageWikiLink Government_of_Australia.
- Charles_Powers wikiPageWikiLink H.B._Higgins.
- Charles_Powers wikiPageWikiLink H._B._Higgins.
- Charles_Powers wikiPageWikiLink H._V._Evatt.
- Charles_Powers wikiPageWikiLink High_Court_of_Australia.
- Charles_Powers wikiPageWikiLink Industrial_relations.
- Charles_Powers wikiPageWikiLink Ipswich_Grammar_School.
- Charles_Powers wikiPageWikiLink John_Bartholomew_(Australian_politician).
- Charles_Powers wikiPageWikiLink Judge.
- Charles_Powers wikiPageWikiLink Legislative_Assembly_of_Queensland.
- Charles_Powers wikiPageWikiLink List_of_Justices_of_the_High_Court_of_Australia.
- Charles_Powers wikiPageWikiLink Living_wage.
- Charles_Powers wikiPageWikiLink Maryborough,_Queensland.
- Charles_Powers wikiPageWikiLink Mayor.
- Charles_Powers wikiPageWikiLink Melbourne.
- Charles_Powers wikiPageWikiLink Nicholas_Tooth.
- Charles_Powers wikiPageWikiLink Official_Opposition_(Australia).
- Charles_Powers wikiPageWikiLink Opposition_(Australia).
- Charles_Powers wikiPageWikiLink Order_of_St_Michael_and_St_George.
- Charles_Powers wikiPageWikiLink Parliament_of_Australia.
- Charles_Powers wikiPageWikiLink Parliament_of_Queensland.
- Charles_Powers wikiPageWikiLink Plural_voting.
- Charles_Powers wikiPageWikiLink Politician.
- Charles_Powers wikiPageWikiLink Premier_of_Queensland.
- Charles_Powers wikiPageWikiLink Privy_Council.
- Charles_Powers wikiPageWikiLink Privy_Council_of_the_United_Kingdom.