Sir Alan Thomas Carmody Commander of the Order of the British Empire was an Australian public servant and government official, who was knighted for his contributions.
Background
Carmody was born at Malvern, a suburb of Melbourne, in Victoria. His father, Thomas Carmody, worked as a telephone mechanic for the Postmaster-General"s Department and was later awarded the Meritorious Service Medal and Bar for bravery in World War I. Alan Carmody attended Street Patrick"s College, Goulburn, New South Wales.
Education
He studied at the Canberra University College and graduated from the University of Melbourne with degrees in Arts (1946), Commerce (1947) and a Masters of Commerce (1950).
Career
Aged 16, he joined the Commonwealth Public Service on 18 March 1937 as a clerk for the Department of Trade and Customs in Canberra. Carmody enlisted in 1940 in the Citizen Air Force of the Royal Australian Air Force. He was commissioned in February 1943, serving as a radar officer and was demobbed in 1945.
During various stages of Carmody"s career, he worked within the Department of Trade and Customs.
The Tariff Board; the Department of Trade where he was Deputy-Secretary. The Department of Customs and Excise as Comptroller-General.
The Department of Customs and Excise (later Department of Police and Customs) as Head. The Department of Business and Consumer Affairs as Secretary and Secretary of the Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet.
In 1975, Carmody pushed for the establishment of an agency to be known as the Australia Police, which he would have headed initially, formed by combining the Australian Capital Territory, Northern Territory and Commonwealth police forces, roughly modelled on the Royal Canadian Mounted Police.
The force would have dealt with smuggling and white-collar crime. The project never came to pass for political reasons. Together they had five children.
Carmody died suddenly from coronary vascular disease on 12 April 1978, aged 57, at his Canberra home, while still serving as Secretary of the Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet.
After a service at Street Christopher"s Cathedral, he was interred in Canberra.