Jim Comerford | |
---|---|
Born | Glencraig, Scotland | 13 September 1913
Died | 8 November 2006 Kurri Kurri, Australia | (aged 93)
Nationality | Australian |
Other names | James Comerford |
Occupation(s) | Trade unionist, writer |
Employer | Australian Coal and Shale Employees' Federation |
Spouse | Mabel Comerford |
Children | Jean Andrew |
James Comerford was an Australian trade unionist, activist, writer and miner who was national general secretary of the Australian Coal and Shale Employees' Federation and served as its Northern New South Wales president from 1953 to 1973.[1][2]
James Comerford was born in 1913 in Glencraig in Fife, Scotland. When Jim was nine his family moved to Kurri Kurri in the Hunter Valley of New South Wales, Australia after his father had been blacklisted from a Scottish mine. At the age of 13 he got a job at a local newspaper, but he soon left it to work in the mines.[1]
When he was 15 he was among the miners in the Rothbury riot of 16 December 1929, when a lockout in the collieries of northern New South Wales led to miners charging the gate of the colliery in or near Rothbury and police opened fire on them in response.[1][3]
In 1942 he became the youngest person ever to be elected to the central council of the Australian Coal and Shale Employees' Federation (also known as the Miners' Federation of Australia). He served as its Northern New South Wales president from 1953 until his retirement in 1973, and at various times had other regional and national roles including national general secretary. He was also active in support of various causes including those of the peace movement, adult education, social clubs for workers, union education, retired mineworkers and unemployed workers, and also total abstinence from alcohol as a member of the Independent Order of Rechabites.[1]
Comerford was known to have been a member of the Young Communist League of Australia in 1930 and then the Communist Party of Australia from 1940 to 1959 before joining the Australian Labor Party in 1960;[4] according to his biographer Barbara Heaton he privately remained a Marxist all his life. He was heavily involved in events around the 1949 Australian coal strike and the 1955 Labor Party split.[5]
After his retirement in 1973, Comerford wrote extensively. He wrote or cowrote books on several subjects, including Lockout, an account of the 1929–30 lockout and the violence at Rothbury.[3] The University of Newcastle made him a Convocation Scholar and a writer-in-residence.
He gave a speech in support of the 1995-6 miners' strike at the Vickery coal mine[6] near Boggabri in New South Wales.[7]
At some time between 1997 and his death in 2006 he donated his personal library to the Coalfields Heritage Group of Cessnock, later renamed the Coalfields Local History Association.[8]
Jim Comerford was married to Mabel Comerford for 70 years.[9] They had a daughter, Jean Andrew.[1]
Comerford died in Kurri Kurri on [4][1] survived by Mabel[9] and Jean Andrew.
8 November 2006,Along with the appointments as Convocation Scholar and writer-in-residence the University of Newcastle awarded Comerford an honorary Master of Arts.[10] In 1989 he was awarded the Medal of the Order of Australia for service to the trade union movement. In nearby Aberdare the Jim Comerford Memorial Wall was dedicated in 1996 to those who died in the mines in the Northern District of the Construction, Forestry, Maritime, Mining and Energy Union, the present-day successor of the Australian Coal and Shale Employees' Federation.[11] Prime Minister of Australia Paul Keating paid tribute to Comerford while unveiling the wall.[12] A bust of Comerford was later put in front of the wall[13] and was dedicated in 2007 by Prime Minister Kevin Rudd.[14]
Local historians, now all deceased were impressed with our progress and attitude to recording the region's history – they donated their collections to the museum's archives – Jim Comerford, Ken Marheine, and Jack Delaney.
When the then prime minister Paul Keating unveiled a memorial at Cessnock in 1996 to miners who lost their lives in pit accidents, he paid tribute to the man after whom the memorial was named: "Jim Comerford is quite simply a Labor legend, the embodiment of Labor's greatest ideals, of solidarity and the pursuit of justice for working men and women."