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Brian Charles Fitzpatrick (17 November 1905 – 3 September 1965) was a writer, historian, journalist and one of the founders of the Australian Council for Civil Liberties.
In 1937, Fitzpatrick won the University of Melbourne’s Harbison Higinbotham Scholarship with his manuscript of British imperialism and Australia 1783–1833; it was published by George Allen and Unwin in 1939. A sequel, The British Empire in Australia: An Economic History, 1834–1939, was published in 1941. A Short History of the Australian Labor Movement was published by Rawson’s Bookshop, Melbourne in 1940 with a new enlarged edition in 1944. In 1940, Fitzpatrick was appointed a Research Fellow in the Department of History, University of Melbourne. He took leave during the war, working for the Commonwealth Rationing Commission and then the Department of War Organisation of Industry. He resumed his fellowship with the University in 1944 and remained there until 1947.
From 1947, Fitzpatrick returned to journalism editing The Australian Democrat, an independent non-party monthly news-review (1947–1950), and The Australian News-Review (1951–1953). During the 1940s, Fitzpatrick wrote a weekly column “Where do we go from here” in Smith’s Weekly. He broadcast regularly from 3XY during the late 1940s and early 1950s. From 1955 until his death, he wrote a monthly article for The Rationalist. From 1958 also until his death in 1965, he published Brian Fitzpatrick’s Labor Newsletter: What Is Going on in Australian politics. He did occasional work for the Australian Broadcasting Commission and the Australian Encyclopaedia.
Fitzpatrick’s economic analyses were presented to the Commonwealth Court of Conciliation and Arbitration by the Australian Council of Trade Unions as part of its case in the Basic Wage Enquiry in 1940, and also to the Standard Hours Enquiry in 1949.
Fitzpatrick was a foundation member of the Australian Council for Civil Liberties in 1935. He was its general secretary from 1939 until his death in 1965.
Includes brief references to Fitzpatrick’s interest in Aboriginal rights, race relations and attitudes.
375 p. : ill., ports. ; 22 cm. Bibliography: p. 299-315. #220722
Fitzpatrick, Brian, 1905-1965. | Radicalism. Fitzpatrick, Brian Charles, 1906-1965. Australia. Biographies. | Radicals — Australia — Biography. | Politics and Government – Political parties – Australian Labor Party. | Politics and Government – Civil rights and citizenship. | History – Biographies – Non-Indigenous. | Race relations – Attitudes. | Politics and Government – Political action – Activism. | Race relations – Racial discrimination.
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