Menzies:
"
won in the High Court a judgment that suddenly
made him famous. In the so-called 'Engineers' case, the young barrister,
arguing alone and with daring creativity for six days against what he
himself called 'a thickly populated
and hostile Bar table', persuaded
a majority of judges that, contrary to current assumptions, members
of a union - in this case the Amalgamated Society of Engineers - who
worked in state-owned enterprises could come within the scope of the
Commonwealth's arbitration power. States' rights were partly at issue.
The judgment had various implications: the major constitutional
one was to expand greatly the potential scope of Commonwealth power
over that of the states."
Allan Martin in Australian Prime Ministers,
2000 p 178.
Marries Pattie
Maie Leckie on 27th September at the Kew Presbyterian Church. Pattie and
Robert met:
"
at a party at Camberwell and it became a kind
of family legend that he walked into the room, strode across to her,
and said: 'You're Pattie Leckie; you used to make eyes at me in church'.
Pat always asserted its truth but he for his part humorously denied
it: he hated to think, he said, that he was such a gauche young man,
even in those days. After the party Robert escorted her to her home
in Hawthorn: the friendship subsequently ripened and in a few months
the two became engaged to be married."
A W Martin, Robert Menzies A Life Vol 1 1894-1943,
1993 p 42
"Five years younger than her husband, Pat had been born
at Alexandra, central-eastern Victoria where her father was at that
time a farmer and storekeeper. Her mother died when Pat was only seven,
and the girl was educated at Presbyterian Ladies' College, East Melbourne,
and then at Fintona, in Camberwell, being a boarder at each school.
... John William (Jack) Leckie, Pat's father, had been educated at Scotch
College... In 1913 he won a seat in the Victorian Legislative Assembly
and in 1917 he moved to the Commonwealth House of Representatives. Defeated
in the election of 1919 ... he established the firm of Leckie and Gray,
lithographic printers and canister manufacturers ... becoming a leading
member of the Chamber of Manufacturers... In 1917 he remarried. With
his daughter Pat he had a particularly close relationship ... strengthened
by the fact that as she grew up she shared his political interests and
travelled with him on election tours."
A W Martin, Robert Menzies A Life Vol 1 1894-1943,
1993 p 42.
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Robert Menzies with his wife Pattie at their Kew home
(in March 1939) 2
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