Frank Wise
16th Premier of Western Australia
In office
31 July 1945 – 1 April 1947
MonarchGeorge VI
GovernorSir James Mitchell
Preceded byJohn Willcock
Succeeded byRoss McLarty
Administrator of the Northern Territory
In office
1 July 1951 – 30 June 1956
Preceded byArthur Driver
Succeeded byJames Archer
Member of the Legislative Assembly
of Western Australia
In office
8 April 1933 – 9 July 1951
Preceded byEdward Angelo
Succeeded byNoel Butcher
ConstituencyGascoyne
Member of the Legislative Council
of Western Australia
In office
22 September 1956 – 21 May 1971
Preceded byDon Barker
Succeeded byBill Withers
ConstituencyNorth Province
Personal details
Born
Frank Joseph Scott Wise

(1897-05-30)30 May 1897
Ipswich, Queensland, Australia
Died29 June 1986(1986-06-29) (aged 89)
Cottesloe, Western Australia, Australia
Political partyLabor

Frank Joseph Scott Wise AO (30 May 1897 – 29 June 1986) was a Labor Party politician who was the 16th Premier of Western Australia. He took office on 31 July 1945 in the closing stages of the Second World War, following the resignation of his predecessor due to ill health. He lost the following election two years later to the Liberal Party after Labor had held office for fourteen years previously.

Wise was a farmer for several years in Queensland before working in the Department of Agriculture in that state. He later moved to Western Australia as a technical adviser in the Western Australian Department of Agriculture and in 1928 was commissioned to report and advise on tropical agriculture in the Northern Territory and the North West of Western Australia.

In the 1933 state election which saw future Premiers Albert Hawke and John Tonkin also win seats, Wise successfully contested the seat of Gascoyne (now merged into Murchison-Eyre) in the state's lower house for the Labor Party. In 1936 he moved to the front bench as Minister for Agriculture and the North-West.

For reasons of ill health, John Willcock resigned his premiership on 31 July 1945 and Wise was elected into the position. Wise held the position for only two years until the 1947 election when his party lost to the Liberals headed by Sir Ross McLarty.

He was Leader of the Opposition for the next four years before taking up the position of Administrator of the Northern Territory and President of the Northern Territory Legislative Council (now replaced with the unicameral Northern Territory Legislative Assembly).

In 1942, botanist Charles Gardner named the Australian shrub Acacia wiseana in his honour.

In the 1979 Australia Day honours list, he was appointed an Officer of the Order of Australia for his services to politics.[1]

References

Parliament of Western Australia Preceded byEdward Angelo MLA for Gascoyne 1933–1951 Succeeded byNoel Butcher Preceded byDon Barker MLC for North Province 1956–1971 Succeeded byBill Withers Political offices Preceded byJohn Willcock Premier 1945–1947 Succeeded byRoss McLarty Preceded byJohn Willcock Treasurer 1945–1947 Succeeded byRoss McLarty Preceded byHarold Millington Minister for Agriculture 1935–1945 Succeeded byJohn Tonkin Preceded byHarold Millington Minister for the North-West 1935–1936 Abolished Preceded byHarold Millington Minister for Police 1936–1937 Succeeded byWilliam Kitson Preceded byHarold Millington Minister for Education 1936–1939 Succeeded byWilliam Kitson Preceded byFrank Troy Minister for Lands 1939–1945 Succeeded byAlexander Panton Preceded byAlbert Hawke Minister for Industrial Development 1958–1959 Succeeded byCharles Court Preceded byGilbert Fraser Minister for Local Government 1958–1959 Succeeded byLes Logan Preceded byGilbert Fraser Minister for Town Planning 1958–1959 Succeeded byLes Logan
Government offices Preceded byArthur Driver Administrator of the Northern Territory 1951–1956 Succeeded byJames Archer