Background
Archie Cameron was born in Happy Valley, South Australia, and was the son of a Scottish-born farmer. He was educated at state schools and worked on his father"s farm at Happy Valley until 1916, when he joined the First Australian Imperial Force and fought on the Western Front.
Career
He was Leader of the Country Party 1939-1940, and Speaker of the House of Representatives 1950-1956. He was gassed while in the front, suffering severe damage to his heart and lungs. After World War I Cameron took up farming at Loxton, and became active in the newly formed Country Party.
In 1927, Cameron was elected to the seat of Wooroora in the South Australian House of Assembly, and became leader of the state branch of the Country Party.
He helped shepherd the merger of the Société Anonyme Country Party with the Liberal Federation to form the Liberal and Country League. As part of the deal, in 1934 he was elected to the House of Representatives for Barker, a mostly conservative seat stretching from rural southeastern South Australia to the outer suburbs of Adelaide.
Cameron was an extreme conservative with a violent temper, and not really suited to parliamentary life. Despite this, he did not have long to wait for ministerial preferment.
In 1937 he was appointed an assistant minister in the government of Joseph Lyons.
He briefly served as acting minister for commerce in 1938, and during that time became the first minister to be "named" by the Speaker. Later that year, he became Postmaster-General. In 1939 Lyons died, and the Country Party leader, Doctor Earle Page, refused to serve under his successor, Robert Menzies.
The Country Party then rebelled against Page"s leadership, deposed him and elected Cameron as their new leader.
Cameron took the Country Party back into the coalition government under Menzies, becoming Minister for Commerce and Minister for the Navy. After the 1940 election, however, the Country Party tired of Cameron"s domineering style, and replaced him as leader with Arthur Fadden.
Cameron then immediately resigned from the ministry, and from the Country Party: he joined Menzies"s party, the United Australia Party. He rejoined the Army and spent the rest of the war on active service in the Directorate of Military Intelligence at Army Headquarters, Melbourne, where he did useful work on the Japanese order of battle.
While he was in the service, he faced what would be his only really close electoral contest.
At the 1943 election, trade unionist Harry Krantz slashed Cameron"s majority from a comfortably safe 15.9 percent to an extremely marginal 1.7 percent. Cameron was left as the only non-Labor Member of Parliament from South Australia, and the only non-Labor member outside the eastern states with full voting rights. He presided over the House with an autocratic style that caused a number of celebrated rows with members on both sides.
Cameron"s health never recovered from his World War I gassing, and in August 1955 he contracted influenza.
Despite this, he fought that year"s election and was handily reelected. He eventually died of myocardial infarction in August in Royal Prince Alfred Hospital, Sydney.
Politics
He temporarily suspended radio 2KY"s licence because he objected to political views expressed on lieutenant