Background
Pearce, a carpenter, was born in Mount Barker, South Australia, to James Pearce (c 1833 – 17 April 1919), a Cornish Australian, whose brother Charles Pearce (1826–1908) was Master of Health Administration for East Torrens 1868–1870.
Pearce, a carpenter, was born in Mount Barker, South Australia, to James Pearce (c 1833 – 17 April 1919), a Cornish Australian, whose brother Charles Pearce (1826–1908) was Master of Health Administration for East Torrens 1868–1870.
He was educated at Red Hill Public School until he was 11, then worked on farms and later became a carpenter in Adelaide, but lost that job in the depression of 1891 and moved to Western Australia.
He joined the Amalgamated Society of Carpenters and Joiners and soon became heavily involved in the union movement. In 1893, Pearce helped found the Progressive Political League, a precursor to the West Australian branch of the ALP. In 1908, he became Minister for Defence in the Cabinet of Andrew Fisher. He oversaw the foundation of the naval college at Jervis Bay and Royal Military College, Duntroon.
By this time, Australia"s prosecution of the war made the introduction of conscription an intensely divisive issue for the ALP. Pearce was convinced of the necessity of introducing conscription, but the majority of his party did not agree.
Pearce, along with many other of the party"s founding members, subsequently followed Hughes out of the party and into the new "National Labor Party." A few months later, the National Labor Party merged with the Commonwealth Liberal Party to form the Nationalist Party, with Hughes as its leader. During this time, over seven months, Pearce was acting prime minister, and the last person to rule for any length of time from the Senate.
Most of the defectors to the Nationalists subsequently faded into obscurity, but Pearce went on to have a successful career in the party of his erstwhile opponents. He became the inaugural Father of the Senate in 1923.
In 1932, Pearce joined the newly formed United Australia Party, and served as a minister in the government of Joseph Lyons until his defeat at the 1937 election (his term ended in June 1938).
He was a Senator for 37 years and three months, a record term. His total service as a minister was 24 years and seven months, also a record in the Australian Parliament. Royal Australian Air Force Base Pearce, the Electoral Division of Pearce and the Canberra suburb of Pearce are named after him.
Self-educated in politics and economics, in 1901 he was elected to the first Commonwealth Parliament as a Senator for Western Australia. In 1914 Australia entered World War I. Upon Billy Hughes" ascension as Prime Minister, Pearce was named Deputy Leader of the party.
He narrowly missed out on being a member of the first Labor Party Cabinet when Chris Watson became Prime Minister in 1904. Foreign much of 1916, Prime Minister Hughes was out of the country as a member of the Imperial war cabinet. At the time of his death, he was the last surviving member of the Senate of the first Australian Parliament.