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Details



Print
908975
  • Title
    Pictorial material from the Frank Browne papers, ca. 1890-1976
  • Creator
  • Call number
    PXE 1247
    ON 479
  • Level of description
    fonds
  • Date

    ca. 1890-1976
  • Type of material
  • Reference code
    908975
  • Physical Description
    245 photographic prints - 18.5 x 49 cm. or smaller - black and white, col.
    3 drawings - 35 x 20 cm. or smaller - ink, wash
    1 item of ephemera - 14 x 9 cm. - postcard
    133 negatives - 5.5 x 5.5 cm. (col.), 4.5 x 7.5 cm. (black and white) - col., black and white
  • ADMINISTRATIVE/ BIOGRAPHICAL HISTORY

    Francis Courtney (Frank) Browne (1915-1981), journalist, was born on 9 September 1915 at Coogee, Sydney, son of Courtney Browne, a tailor from New Zealand, and his Sydney-born wife Linda Veronica, née Heckenberg. Frank was educated at Christian Brothers’ College, Waverley

    Turning to politics, Browne stood unsuccessfully for parliament three times—in 1943 as the United Australia Party candidate for the Federal seat of Barton against Dr Bert Evatt; in 1944 as the Democratic Party candidate for the State seat of Bondi; and in 1947 as an Independent Liberal for the State seat of Vaucluse. He had become a branch president of the new Liberal Party in 1945, and had formed a Young Liberals’ League which that party promptly disbanded

    By 1946 Browne had taken up his main vocation: the purveyance of political, business and personal information in a weekly newsletter for subscribers entitled Things I Hear. Things I Hear managed to infuriate politicians of every party, particularly in Canberra, which Browne visited regularly. Thus it was not surprising, though the cause of some regret, that Federal parliament, in a unique exercise of its power under section 49 of the Constitution, called Browne and another defendant, Raymond Fitzpatrick, before the Bar of the House for breach of parliamentary privilege. The alleged breach had occurred in an article in a free advertising weekly, the Bankstown Observer, edited at the time by Browne and owned by Fitzpatrick, a wealthy haulage contractor known as `Mr Big’.

    In May 1955 the Labor member for Reid, Charles Morgan, had drawn parliament’s attention to the offending reference which alleged his involvement in `an immigration racket’. The House of Representatives standing committee of privileges ignored advice from the clerk of the House, Frank Green, that parliamentary privilege should not protect a member against allegations concerning his conduct outside the House, and that the proper place to seek requital was a civil court. Reporting no evidence of improper conduct by Morgan, the committee found Fitzpatrick and Browne guilty of a serious breach of privilege by publishing material intended to influence and intimidate a member in his conduct in the House.

    Both men appeared before the Bar of the House on 10 June. `Mr Big’ spoke briefly and apologetically, but Browne gave as little ground as he might have done at a different kind of bar, talking vehemently about freedom of speech. During the ensuing debate Prime Minister (Sir) Robert Menzies termed Browne’s address `an exhibition of unparalleled arrogance and impertinence’, while the deputy-leader of the Opposition, Arthur Calwell (usually referred to in Things I Hear as `Awful Arthur’), described Browne as `an arrogant rat’ and Fitzpatrick as `an illiterate lout’. By 55 votes to 12 in the case of Fitzpatrick and 55 to 11 for Browne, the House resolved that both should be imprisoned for three months. And so they were, in Goulburn gaol, much to the disapproval of some press and public opinion. On his release, Browne formed the short-lived Australian Party

    Reference:
    Australian Dictionary of Biography. http://adb.anu.edu.au/biography/browne-francis-courtney-frank-12259 (accessed 22 August, 2012)
  • Scope and Content
    PXE 1247
    245 photographic prints
    Includes many undated portraits of Frank Browne including one by John Hearder, along with many undated family portraits, family pets and Frank Browne among dining parties at restaurants; many pictures of Australian Party rallies, some including Frank Browne addressing the audience, ca. 1955; many pictures on board the oil tanker 'Miller's Canopus'; stills from American movies of the 1920s and 1930s including, 'A Woman of Affairs', 'The Torrent', 'The Kiss', 'The Divine Women', 'A Painted Veil', 'Wild Orchids'; polaroid photographs of scenes in Hong Kong and Sydney Harbour; 36 photographs of allies in action in various theatres of conflict during World War II, including New Guinea and Syria. Most of the pictures have captions on their reverse side and were taken by the Commonwealth Department of Information - does include some World War II photographs taken by the United States Army; several pictures of cargo ships in Sydney Harbour; panorama of Bondi Beach, no date and 1 photograph of a baby, ca. 1890

    3 drawings being 2 cartoons of Billy Hughes - 1 by L. F. Reynolds - and a casual sketch

    1 postcard showing a male athlete, no date

    ON 479
    125 colour negatives featuring group portraits, pets, fishing scenes as well as some street scenes and coastal views

    8 black and white negatives showing a woman departing on a train

    Forms part of MLMSS 3345
  • Access Conditions

    Access via appointment - applies to ON 479
  • Copying Conditions
    Copyright restrictions may apply: Photographs in this collection created before 1955 are all out of copyright. Photographs created after 1955 are in copyright for the life of creator plus 70 years
    Please acknowledge:: Mitchell Library, State Library of New South Wales and courtesy copyright holder
  • General note

    Pic.Acc. Upgrade Project - Information transferred from Pic.Acc.4068 as part of the eRecords Project 2012-13
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