Edwin Abbott (public servant)

Edwin Abbott CBE (21 November 1878  1 September 1947) was a senior Australian public servant. Between 1933 and 1944, he was Controller-General of the Department of Trade and Customs.

Edwin Abbott

CBE
Controller-General of the Department of Trade and Customs
In office
December 1933  July 1944
Personal details
Born(1878-11-21)21 November 1878
Died1 September 1947(1947-09-01) (aged 68)
Darling Point, Sydney, Australia
NationalityAustralian
OccupationPublic servant

Life and career

Abbott was born on 21 November 1878.[1] He was educated at Fort Street High School in Sydney.[2] At the age of 15, he joined the New South Wales Customs Department as a clerk.[3] He entered the Commonwealth Public Service in the Department of Trade and Customs when the staff of his New South Wales department was taken over at Federation.

Between 1927 and 1933, Abbott served as Deputy Controller-General of Customs. In the role he traveled to London as adviser accompanying James Scullin to the Imperial Conference. He also traveled to Canada and the United States, and he helped to prepare the 1931 Canada-Australia trade agreement. In 1932 he attended the British Empire Economic Conference in Ottawa.[4]

He was promoted to the position of Controller-General of Customs in December 1933.[5] Whilst comptroller, Abbott travelled overseas on official business once more, visiting Canada and London again to discuss improvements to the agreements made in Ottawa in 1932.[4]

Abbott retired from the public service in 1944.[1]

Abbott died at his home in Darling Point, Sydney on 1 September 1947 while listening to the radio. He was survived by five daughters; his wife had died around three years prior.[2]

Awards

In January 1933, Abbott was appointed a Commander of the Order of the British Empire in recognition of services to the Department of Trade and Customs.[6]

gollark: And they have some thing where the service's backend servers can also verify that the device is locked down and not user-controllable through some cryptographic thing, where SafetyNet throws data at Google's services and they say if the device is acceptable or not.
gollark: Meanwhile on Android Google has some awful SafetyNet thing which means apps can refuse to run if you have the bootloader unlocked, yes.
gollark: You can turn that off, and there's no feature where, say, a website can refuse to serve content to you if you do.
gollark: Or decrypt or whatever.
gollark: I think part of the idea of "trusted computing" is to put a secret key on a chip somewhere so it can attest that you're using your computer as Microsoft intended and refuse to sign stuff otherwise.

References

  1. "Customs head retiring: Mr. E. Abbott's 50 years' service". The Sydney Morning Herald. 30 June 1944. Archived from the original on 23 January 2014.
  2. "Obituary: Mr. Edwin Abbott". The Canberra Times. 4 September 1947. p. 3. Retrieved 13 August 2015.
  3. CP 264: Edwin ABBOTT CBE, National Archives of Australia, retrieved 13 August 2015
  4. "Mr. E. Abbott Dead: Former Customs Comptroller". The Sydney Morning Herald. 2 September 1947. p. 3.
  5. "Customs: Appointment of new Controller, Mr. Edwin Abbott". The Canberra Times. 5 December 1933.
  6. "Search Australian Honours, Name: ABBOTT, Edwin, Award: The Order of the British Empire - Commander (Civil)", itsanhonour.gov.au, Australian Government, archived from the original on 13 August 2015
Government offices
Preceded by
Ernest Thomas Hall
Controller-General of the Department of Trade and Customs
1933 – 1944
Succeeded by
John Kennedy
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.