Saturday, February 28, 2015

THE LIGHT ON THE HILL ORIGIN ; ALP AND POSTAL HISTORY

 
 
An August 1994  first day of issue  stamp on  a   postcard  depicting  the portrait  of the ALP Australian  Prime  Minister, Ben Chifley,  by A.D. Colquhoun (born 1884) , for the Historic Memorials Collection, Parliament House Canberra .

Chifley, PM from July 13, 1945-December 19, 1949, it was  who  first  mentioned the  light  on the  hill as the  ALP goal  at  a  NSW  Labor conference. During his speech  he said :

"I have had the privilege of leading the Labor Party for nearly four years. They have not  been easy times and it has not been an easy job. It is a man-killing job and would be impossible if it were not for the help of my colleagues and members of the movement.

" No Labor Minister or leader ever has an easy job. The urgency that rests behind the Labor movement, pushing it on to do things, to create new conditions, to reorganise the economy of the country, always means that the people who work within the Labor movement, people who lead, can never have an easy job. The job of  the evangelist  is  never easy.

" Because of the turn of fortune's wheel your  Premier  ( John  McGirr) and I have gained some prominence in  the Labor movement. But the strength of the movement cannot come from us. We may make plans and pass legislation to help and direct the economy of the country. But the job of getting the things the people of the country want comes from the roots of the Labor movement - the people who support it.

" When I sat at a Labor meeting in the country with only ten or fifteen men there, I found a man sitting beside me who had been working in the Labor movement for 54 years. I have no doubt that many of you have been doing the same, not hoping for any advantage from the movement, not hoping for any personal gain, but because you believe in a movement that has been built up to bring better conditions to the people. Therefore, the success of the Labor Party at the next elections depends entirely, as it always has done, on the people who work.

"I try to think of the Labor movement, not as putting an extra sixpence into somebody's pocket, or making somebody Prime Minister or Premier, but as a movement bringing something better to the people, better standards of living, greater happiness to the mass of the people. We have a great objective - the light on the hill - which we aim to reach by working for  the betterment of mankind not only here but anywhere we may give a helping hand. If it were not for that, the Labor movement would not be  worth  fighting for.

" If the movement can make someone more comfortable, give to some father or mother a greater feeling of security for their children, a feeling that if a depression comes there will be work, that the government is striving its hardest to do its best, then the Labor movement will be completely justified.

 "It does not matter about persons like me who have our limitations. I only hope that the generosity, kindliness and friendliness shown to me by thousands of my colleagues in the Labor movement will continue to be given to the movement and add zest to its work."
 
NOTE: The postcard, stamped Parliament House Canberra , displays  the  printed  signatures of   PMs  in  the series , one of them Sir Arthur Fadden , a Queenslander, who only lasted in  the top job for  40  days...more later.