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Harrison
Ord was born on 15 August 1862 at Kensington, London the son of Harrison
Ord, engine fitter and Susannah née Robinson. In 1877 the family
migrated to Victoria and the following March having passed the civil service
examination joined the Crown Lands department as a clerk (1878-86). In 1886
he transferred to the chief secretary’s office and was promoted senior
inspector of factories (1890-93) until his appointment as chief inspector of
factories, workrooms and shops (1893-1910) upon the passing of the
Factories and Shops Act (amended) (1896), one of the most powerful and
progressive Acts in Victoria's history designed to prevent ‘sweating’ by the
eradication of unduly low wages, long hours and poor working conditions.
Amended to introduce wage boards made up of both employer and employee
representatives to determine minimum rates of pay, it wasn't until the
(Sir Thomas) Bent (q.v.) ministry in 1905
ensured the Act became permanent in the stature books; Ord’s zeal,
indomitable courage and disregard for red-tape led to his fair share of
criticism in his “ardent desire to right the wrongs of the poor and helpless
and downtrodden”. At the 1901 Victorian Factories and Shops royal
commission that reported mixed results in the abolition of ‘sweating’, Ord
told how employers would remark “'You cannot win a battle without killing a
lot or men'…They felt it perfectly justifiable to kill employees by long
hours and hard work in building up the employers’ industry”. The
Melbourne Punch writing of Ord in 1906 described him as “naturally
nervous, often irritable, sometime provokingly petulant, but he is also
courageous, conscientious and chivalrous...he is, and always has been, very
human” but noted that “if he enjoys any sense of masterfulness it is
brief, for he that lives the longest dies but young, for the Public Servant
placed on such a pinnacle there is much abuse, little reward and less
consolation”. Residing at
Nyallo - 46 Beaconsfield Parade, St. Kilda, Ord died on 10 July 1910
from a fractured skull as a result of an accident near the north-east corner
of the Botanic Gardens when his horse slipped and fell while swerving to
miss a post; amongst those who attended his funeral were the Premier John
Murray (Warrnambool Cemetery), (Sir) John
Mackey (q.v.), the secretary of the 4,000 strong Victorian
Employers’ Association (Herbert) Robert Walpole (Phillip Island
Cemetery), and the chief architect of the Act, the liberal conservative
Sir Alexander Peacock (Creswick Cemetery) who upon hearing of his death
described Ord as “the best public servant the State had ever had, and no man
had been more loyal and enthusiastic in his work”. |

Monumental Headstone
(enlarge image) |
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Source:
ADB Volume 11 1891-1939 (Nes-Smi).
The Argus 11,12 & 13 July 1910.
The Age 11 & 12 July 1910.
The Herald 11 July 1910.
Melbourne Punch 22 March 1906.
Smith, J. (ed), “Cyclopedia of Victoria”
(1903).
Cannon, M., “The Roaring Days” (1988). |
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