The Right Honourable Peter Fraser CH |
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Peter Fraser, Prime Minister of New Zealand, circa 1946.
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24th Prime Minister of New Zealand | |
In office 27 March 1940 – 13 December 1949 |
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Monarch | George VI |
Governor-General |
George Monckton-Arundell Cyril Newall Bernard Freberg |
Preceded by | Michael Joseph Savage |
Succeeded by | Sidney Holland |
15th Leader of the Opposition | |
In office 13 December 1949 – 12 December 1950 |
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Preceded by | Sidney Holland |
Succeeded by | Walter Nash |
4th President of the Labour Party | |
In office 1920–1921 |
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Vice President | Frederick Cooke |
Leader | Harry Holland |
Preceded by | Tom Paul |
Succeeded by | Frederick Cooke |
Member of the New Zealand Parliament for Wellington Central |
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In office 1918–1946 |
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Preceded by | Robert Fletcher |
Succeeded by | Charles Henry Chapman |
Member of the New Zealand Parliament for Brooklyn |
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In office 1946–1951 |
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Preceded by | None, seat created |
Succeeded by | Arnold Nordmeyer |
Personal details | |
Born |
Hill of Fearn, Scotland |
28 August 1884
Died | 12 December 1950 Wellington, New Zealand |
(aged 66)
Political party |
Labour (1916-50) Social Democratic (1913-16) Socialist (1910-13) |
Spouse(s) | Janet Henderson Munro |
Children | None |
Profession | Stevedore |
Religion | Presbyterian |
Peter Fraser CH PC (28 August 1884 – 12 December 1950) was a New Zealand political figure who served as the 24th Prime Minister from 27 March 1940 until 13 December 1949. He assumed the office nearly seven months after the outbreak of World War II and remained as head of government for almost ten years. Considered by historians as a major figure in the history of New Zealand Labour Party, he was in office longer than any other New Zealand Labour Prime Minister and is to date the fourth longest serving Prime Minister.
A native of Scotland, Peter Fraser was born in Hill of Fearn, a small village near the town of Tain in the Highland area of Easter Ross. He received a basic education, but had to leave school due to his family's poor financial state. Though apprenticed to a carpenter, he eventually abandoned this trade due to extremely poor eyesight – later in life, faced with difficulty reading official documents, he would insist on spoken reports rather than written ones. Before the deterioration of his vision, however, he read extensively – with socialist activists such as Keir Hardie and Robert Blatchford among his favourites.
Becoming politically active in his early teens, he was 16 years old upon attaining the post of secretary of the local Liberal Association, and, eight years later, in 1908, joined the Independent Labour Party.