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Henry Parkes
Foundation
PO Box 1360,
Neutral Bay
NSW 2089
Ph/fax:
02 9953 9678
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The 7th Henry Parkes Oration
THE HON. JOHN BANNON AO BA LLB PhD
Saturday 24 October 2009, Tenterfield Memorial School of Arts, Tenterfield NSW
The 7th Henry Parkes Oration will be delivered in historic Tenterfield by
The Hon. John Bannon, prominent academic and former Premier of South Australia, in conjunction with celebrations marking
the 120th anniversary of Parkes' original Tenterfield Address.
Join us on a train journey to Tenterfield to attend the oration plus other celebratory events.
Departing Friday 23 October 2009, returning Monday 26 October
Book by 17 September: download flyer/booking form; or
go to www.tenterfield.nsw.gov.au
Supported by the National Trust of Australia (NSW) After Hours Committee and
the Friends of the Sir Henry Parkes Memorial School of Arts in association with the Henry Parkes Foundation
Dr John Bannon is involved in research, writing and lecturing on the history of federation, the Australian Constitution and federal-state relations in Australia. His book Supreme Federalist, a political biography of Sir John Downer, who was a founder of the Commonwealth and a member of the Drafting Committee of the Australasian Federal Convention, was published this year by Wakefield Press.
Other publications include a monograph ,The Crucial Colony, outlining the role of South Australia and Charles Cameron Kingston in particular in reviving Federation in the period from 1893 to 1897 and the chapter on 'South Australia and Federation' in the definitive Centenary Companion on Australian Federation, published by Cambridge University Press. He has also contributed chapters to books published by Melbourne University, Federation, UQ and Pluto Presses. He was the co-editor of The New Federalist, the national journal of federation history.
He is currently an Adjunct Professor of Law at the University of Adelaide, a Visiting Research Fellow at Flinders University, and for the first half of 2009 took up a residential Fellowship at Edinburgh University. He is President of the History Council of South Australia. Other interests include cricket and he is a member of the Board of Cricket Australia.
He retired as the Master of St Mark's College at the University of Adelaide at the end of 2007 after an eight-year term of office. Prior to that he was a member of the Australian Broadcasting Corporation Board from 1994 to 1999.
Dr Bannon was elected to the SA House of Assembly in 1977, retiring in 1993. During his time in Parliament he served as a Minister in the Dunstan and Corcoran Governments (1978-9) and then as Leader of the Opposition (1979-1982), and was Premier and Treasurer of South Australia from 1982 to 1992. He was National President of the Australian Labor Party from 1988 to 1992.
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