
This clip begins with a pan across the delegates to the Victorian Labor Party’s 1928 Easter conference, standing outside Melbourne Trades Hall, and continues with individual shots of key Labor personalities of the time. Summary by Adreinne Parr.
Charles Crofts (1871-1950) was a major figure in the trade union movement. He was joint advocate for the Commonwealth Council of Federated Unions in the 1926-27 standard hours case, resulting in the in-principle acceptance by the Commonwealth Arbitration Court of the 44-hour week. Richard Crouch (1868-1949) joined the Labor Party on the encouragement of James Scullin. At the time of the conference he had just been elected President of the Victorian branch. His presidential address was a plea for national unity. Mary Rogers (1872-1932), apparently the only woman delegate, was a distinguished community and political worker and was secretary of the Labor Women’s Organising Committee from 1925 to 1932.
This is mute newsreel footage, edited with caption cards identifying individual delegates, of the Victorian Labor Party’s 1928 Easter conference at the Melbourne Trades Hall.
This short film is one of a collection of archival campaign films held at the NFSA on behalf of the Australian Labor Party. Essentially it’s a visual record of the delegates attending the Victorian party conference at Melbourne Trades Hall in 1928. The conference was significant because a decade had passed since the 1916-17 divisions over conscription, and the ALP was finally reconsolidating and presenting itself once more as a true political force. As one of the captions states, ‘the stalwarts of the Labor cause were all there’. The general tone of all the captions reflects the optimism of the gathering. In his address to the conference, the newly-elected President of the Victorian branch, Richard Crouch, made a plea for national unity. On 12 October the following year, James Scullin led the ALP to a landslide federal election victory.
The film represents a rare opportunity to view moving footage of a collection of key historical figures of the ALP and the labour and trade union movement.
Notes by Adrienne Parr
The National Film and Sound Archive of Australia acknowledges Australia’s Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples as the Traditional Custodians of the land on which we work and live and gives respect to their Elders both past and present.