Governor of South Australia (1953?60)
Air Vice Marshal
Sir Robert Allingham George
,
KCMG
,
KCVO
,
KBE
,
CB
,
MC
,
KStJ
(27 July 1896 ? 13 September 1967) was a senior officer in the
Royal Air Force
and
Governor of South Australia
from 23 February 1953 until 7 March 1960. He was born in the
County of Ross and Cromarty
, Scotland, on 27 July 1896, and educated at
Invergordon
and
Inverness
. In May 1927, he married Sybil Elizabeth Baldwin.
Military career
[
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]
When the First World War began in 1914, George enlisted in the
Seaforth Highlanders
and was sent to France.
[1]
He was transferred to the
Royal Flying Corps
and was awarded the
Military Cross
for his night bombing.
[1]
In 1919 he was appointed to a permanent commission in the
Royal Air Force
.
[1]
He was appointed Officer Commanding
No. 100 Squadron
in 1930 and Officer Commanding
No. 33 Squadron
in 1932.
[1]
George later served as Senior Air Staff Officer at Headquarters RAF Far East in
Singapore
from 1934 and as Station Commander at
RAF Hawkinge
from 1937.
[1]
At the outbreak of the Second World War he was Air Attache in
Ankara
.
[1]
He went on to be Air Officer Commanding
AHQ Iraq and Persia
in 1944.
[1]
After the War he served as Air Attache in Paris until he retired in 1952.
[1]
He was appointed a
Commander of the Order of the British Empire
in 1944 and a
Companion of the Order of the Bath
in 1948, promoted to substantive air vice marshal in 1950 and knighted as a
Knight Commander of the Order of the British Empire
in 1952.
[1]
Governor of South Australia
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]
Sir Robert was appointed Governor of South Australia in August 1952. He and Lady George arrived in Adelaide early the following year. The Premier, Sir Thomas Playford, noted in his welcome address to Sir Robert that governors were expected to be "an inspiration in times of danger."
Playford's words turned out to be portentous ? South Australia would suffer through earthquake, fire and flood in consecutive years during Sir Robert's tenure. In March 1954, the worst earthquake in Adelaide's history damaged
Government House
, along with many other buildings in the city. Less than a year later, the Governor's summer residence at
Marble Hill
was destroyed in the
Black Sunday bushfires
of January 1955. He and his wife and staff sheltered under wet blankets in the driveway, and were lucky to escape with their lives. In a particularly cruel twist of fate, all Sir Robert and Lady George's possessions were lost in the fire, having been relocated to Marble Hill while Government House was undergoing repairs for the damage suffered in the earthquake.
[2]
Finally, the
1956 Murray River flood
was the largest in recorded history. On 20 August, Sir Robert surveyed the flood-hit areas in a light aircraft, and said he was "appalled at the tremendous area underwater and the terrific damage which had resulted."
[3]
Sir Robert was a colourful governor, once demanding a personal helicopter from Premier Playford. Although admired for his bravery, Sir Robert was considered old-fashioned by the masses, particularly due to his impatience,
polo
-playing, and his habit of carrying a
fly-whisk
and a
cane
. Lady George was an ardent supporter of many charities, but her support for traditional family roles was not popular with the emerging
feminists
; once, while officiating at the opening of new laboratories at a girls' college, she claimed: "The most important thing for a girl is to learn how to run a home well."
[2]
Despite their frequent clashes, Playford supported George and the dignity of the Vice-Regal post in a 1956 court case regarding the cook's wages. The prosecuting lawyer was future Labor premier
Don Dunstan
. Playford negotiated an out-of-court settlement on condition that Dunstan and his Labor colleagues in the House would not debate the budget item. Labor maverick
Samuel Lawn
(the member for
Adelaide
) did not honour the agreement, and tried to raise a public scandal. Playford responded by extending George's term.
[2]
Freemasonry
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George was appointed Grand Master of the Grand Lodge of South Australia in 1956.
[4]
Retirement and death
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George and his family retired to England in 1959 after which he held no further government appointments. He died in a London Hospital on 13 September 1967, after being hit by a motorist and not regaining consciousness.
[2]
References
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]