| William
Ferguson Massey
Born, 1865, Limavady,
Ireland
Died, 1925
Prime Minister
10 July 1912-10 May 1925 (Reform Party Government 1912-15, National
wartime Reform-Liberal Government 1915-1919, Reform Party 1919-25).
Died in Office.
Massey was born
on 26 March 1856 in Limavedy, Ireland. He was educated at a national
school there and at a secondary school was kept by a classical scholar.
While he was still at school his father sold the farm and emigrated
to New Zealand. Massey arrived in the City of Auckland on 11
December 1870 and settled in Taranaki.
Massey worked with
his father until reaching the age of 17. He later purchased a threshing
machine and leased a farm of 100 acres in Mangere. In 1882 he married
Christina Allen Paul, the daughter of a neighbouring farmer. He soon
became a member of the Mangere Road Board and chairman of the school
committee, and in 1890 became President of Mangere Farmer’s Club.
In 1893 Massey
contested the seat of Franklin, but was narrowly defeated. A few weeks
later the Waitemata seat became vacant, and Massey contested and took
the seat. At the next election, 1896, he stood for his own district,
Franklin. He held the seat without interruption until his death. In
September 1903, after the opposition had been without leader for some
time, Massey was elected leader of the Conservative Party (later to
become the Reform Party). He led the party steadily forward to victory
in 1912. On 10 July 1912 Massey was sworn in as Prime Minister, it was
5 months since Parliament had first sat after the election, and there
had been much confusion over who should be forming a ministry. It was
the first ministry from the Conservative side since 1890.
The general election
on 10 December 1914 was fought under the influence of war. The outcome
was that Massey had a following of 40 in the new Parliament, Ward had
4 and Labour 4 members. Convinced that with such a precarious majority
he was no longer justified in taking upon his own party the whole responsibility
of administering the government in a time of crisis, Massey made overtures
to the other party leaders which resulted in the formation of a National
Government. Massey remained the Prime Minister (sworn in 12 August 1915),
and Minister of Lands and Labour.
Massey attended
the Peace Conference at Versailles in 1919, but before he returned it
became clear that the and the Liberal leader could not agree on some
critical issues. The gap became more pronounced, and on 21 August 1919
the Liberals withdrew from the National ministry. Massey quickly reformed
the cabinet, and when the general elections were held on 17 December
that year, the Reform party returned to office. It was the largest majority
Massey ever commanded as Prime Minister.
As the 1922 election
approached, Massey’s health began to deteriorate, he had spent 10 difficult
years as Prime Minister. After the election, faced with the probable
co-operation of Labour and the Liberal party, which would make voting
equal, however Massey still formed a ministry. He lost two of his colleagues
by death, and he was still bearing the load of the Treasury as well
as the Prime Ministership.
Massey’s health
began to suffer severely under the prolonged strain, and he died on
10 May 1925.

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