John William Leckie (14 October 1872 – 25
September 1947) was an
Australian farmer
turned politician.
Leckie was born at Alexandra,
Victoria
and educated at Scotch College,
Melbourne
.
He played
Australian rules
football for
Fitzroy Football
Club (then in the
Victorian Football
Association) in 1895.
He studied
medicine at the University of Melbourne
for two years, but after falling out with his
father he prospected for gold in Kalgoorlie,
Western Australia
and played football in Fremantle
. In 1897, he returned to Alexandra to run
the family store, his father having died. In April 1898, he married
May Beatrix Johnston. He was a member of the Alexandra Shire
Council from 1900 to 1911 and was shire president in 1904 snf 1905.
His wife
died in 1910 and he moved to Melbourne
in 1912 and co-founded a firm of lithographic printers and canister
manufacturers. He married Hattie Martha Knight in April
1917. In 1920, the eldest of his daughters from his first marriage,
Pattie Maie married future
Prime Minister Robert Menzies.
Political career
Leckie ran unsuccessfully for the
Anti-Socialist Protectionists for the
Australian House of
Representatives seat of
Mernda at the
1906 election. He was
elected as member for
Benambra in the
Victorian Legislative
Assembly in 1913 as a
Commonwealth Liberal Party
candidate. He won the federal seat of
Indi in the
1917 election for the
Nationalist Party of
Australia. He lost his seat at the
1919 election to a
Victorian Farmers' Union
candidate. He ran unsuccessfully for the state seat of
Upper Goulburn in 1921
and then concentrated on his business and business groups.
At the
1934 election,
Leckie was elected Senator for
Victoria
as a member of the United Australia Party. In
October 1940, he became Minister without portfolio assisting the
Minister for Trade and
Customs and Minister without portfolio assisting the
Minister for
Labour and National Service in his father-in-law's
father-in-law's ministry. In June
1941, he became
Minister for Aircraft
Production and held that position until the defeat of the
Fadden government in October 1941. He
lost his bid to be re-elected at the
1946 election and served
out his term ending in June 1947.
Three
months later, Leckie died of cancer at his
home in the Melbourne suburb of Hawthorn
, survived by his wife and their son and by three
daughters from his first marriage. His son Roland Leckie was the member for the state
seat of Evelyn from
1950 to 1952 and later a crown prosecutor and a judge of the
County
Court
.
References