Street family

The Street family is an Australian legal, political and military family. The dynasty was founded by John Rendell Street, a 19th century banker and politician. In the 20th century, John's son Sir Philip Whistler Street, grandson Lieutenant-Colonel Sir Kenneth Whistler Street, and great-grandson Commander Sir Laurence Whistler Street each served as Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of New South Wales and Lieutenant-Governor of New South Wales. Brigadier Geoffrey Austin Street served as Minister of Defence in World War II, his son Anthony Austin Street served as Minister of Foreign Affairs, and Jessie Grey, Lady Street served as Australia's first female delegate to the United Nations. In the 21st century, Sir Laurence's son Commander Alexander Street, daughter Lieutenant-Commander Sylvia Emmett (née Street) and son-in-law Arthur Emmett all serve as judges of the Federal Court of Australia.[1]

Street
Current region Australia
Place of origin United Kingdom
FounderJohn Street
Members
MottoLatin: "Fideli Cum Fidelis"
(Faithful Among the Faithless)

1st generation

John Rendell Street, MLC (1832–1891) was an Australian banker and politician. His father John Wood Street of Woodlands, New South Wales descended from Baron Sir Thomas Street, an English Chief Justice who presided on the last King's Bench before the Glorious Revolution of 1688.[2] In 1886, John founded the Perpetual Trustee Company as managing director with fellow trustees Sir Edmund Barton and Sir James Fairfax. He succeeded Sir Edmund Barton, Australia's 1st Prime Minister, in his New South Wales Legislative Assembly seat of East Sydney.[3] He married Susanna Lawson, the daughter of Australian politician Commandant William Lawson, MLC who along with William Wentworth and Gregory Blaxland pioneered the first settler crossing of the Blue Mountains in 1813, granting Sydney access to the inland pastures that would fuel economic growth thereafter. John and Susanna had seven children, including the future Sir Philip and Ernest, who married Emma Browne, the daughter of Australian author Thomas Browne.[4] John was a director of the Colonial Mutual Life Assurance Company (now Commonwealth Bank). His sister Sarah married Thomas Smith, MLC, managing director of the Commercial Banking Company of Sydney (now NAB) and nephew of CBCS chairman Henry Smith, MLC. Two other Street ancestors via Sir Laurence's first wife Susan (née Watt) were John's contemporaries, namely John Watt, MLC, a director of the Union Bank of Australia (now ANZ), and his father-in-law George Holden, MLC, a trustee of the Bank of New South Wales (now Westpac).[5]

2nd generation

Sir Philip Street, 1st Chief Justice of the family

Sir Philip Whistler Street, KCMG, KC (1863–1938) was the 8th Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of New South Wales and Lieutenant-Governor of New South Wales. On 11 February 1907, he was made a full judge of the Supreme Court of New South Wales. Sir Philip was made Chief Justice of the Supreme Court on 28 January 1925 and held that office until his 70th birthday in 1933. He was appointed Lieutenant-Governor of New South Wales in 1930, and administered the state in the absence of the Governor of New South Wales from May to October 1934, January to February 1935, and January to August 1936. He died in 1938 and was buried with a state funeral at St Andrew's Cathedral. He is the second longest-serving judge in New South Wales history. His second son was Laurence, and his eldest was Kenneth.[6]

Lieutenant Laurence Street, an ANZAC officer who fought and died in the Battle of Gallipoli, age 21

3rd generation

Lieutenant Laurence Whistler Street (1894–1915) was 21 years of age when he was killed in action in May 1915 at the Battle of Gallipoli. A former student of Sydney Law School, he enlisted in the Australian Army among the first of his generation in August 1914 and was made an officer of the 3rd Battalion of the 1st Infantry Brigade.[7]

Lieutenant Colonel Sir Kenneth Whistler Street, KCMG, KStJ, QC (1890–1972) was the 10th Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of New South Wales and Lieutenant-Governor of New South Wales. He was elevated as a judge of the Supreme Court on 7 October 1931, thus joining the bench of which his father was then Chief Justice. According to Percival Serle, this is the only known case in Australian history of a father and a son sitting together as judges on the same bench. Sir Kenneth was sworn in as Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of New South Wales on 7 February 1950. He was Lieutenant-Governor of New South Wales from 1950 to 1972.

Prior to his career as a judge, he served the Allied forces in World War I, having been commissioned on 29 September 1914 in the Duke of Cornwall’s Light Infantry and sent to France. He ultimately rose to the rank of Lieutenant-Colonel in the Australian Army. Like his father before him, he was buried with a state funeral at St Andrew's Cathedral, Sydney. Street House at Cranbrook School, Sydney is named in his honour.[8] Sir Kenneth married Jessie Mary Grey Lillingston and named his son Laurence after his brother who died at Gallipoli.

Jessie Mary Grey, Lady Street (née Lillingston; 1889–1970) was a diplomat and suffragette. She was the daughter of Charles Alfred Gordon Lillingston, JP and Mabel Harriet Ogilvie, the daughter of Australian politician Edward David Stuart Ogilvie, MLC.[9] Jessie campaigned extensively for peace and human rights. She was dubbed "Red Jessie" by her detractors in the right-wing media for her efforts to promote diplomacy with the USSR and ease tensions during the Cold War.[10] She was a key figure in Australian and international political life for over 50 years, from the women's suffrage struggle in England to the removal of Australia's constitutional discrimination against Aboriginal people in 1967.

Lady Street as Australia's only female delegate at the post-war establishment of the United Nations conference at San Francisco in 1945
Sir Kenneth Street, 2nd Chief Justice of the family

Jessie was Australia's only female delegate to the establishment of the United Nations conference in San Francisco in 1945, where she played a key role in ensuring that gender was included as a non-discrimination clause, in addition to race and religion, in the United Nations Charter. She is recognised both in Australia and internationally for her activism. The Jessie Street Centre, the Jessie Street Trust, the Jessie Street National Women's Library and the Jessie Street Gardens exist in her honour.[11]

Brigadier Geoffrey Austin Street, MP, MC (1894–1940) was a cousin of Sir Kenneth's who served as Australia's Minister of Defence in the First Menzies Government during World War II. He was awarded a Military Cross for his courage in serving the First Australian Imperial Force at the Battle of Gallipoli, where he was wounded before returning to service in France during World War I. At the request of his friend Sir Robert Menzies, Geoffrey stood for and won the seat of Corangamite in 1934.

Geoffrey was made Minister of Defence in November 1938 and played a major role in the expansion of the military and munitions production prior to the outbreak of World War II and pushed the National Registration Act (1939) through parliament despite strong opposition. Geoffrey died in the 1940 Canberra air disaster.[12]

4th generation

Commander Sir Laurence Whistler Street, AC, KCMG, KStJ, QC (1926–2018) was the 14th and youngest Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of New South Wales and Lieutenant-Governor of New South Wales since 1844.[13] He was first made a judge of the Supreme Court of New South Wales in the Equity Division. He was appointed Chief Justice and Lieutenant-Governor in 1974. He had joined the Royal Australian Navy at age 17 to serve in World War II and went on to become a commander of the Royal Australian Navy Reserve and an honorary colonel of the Australian Army Reserve. Sir Laurence pioneered the practice of mediation and became the chairman of Fairfax Media and a director of Monte dei Paschi di Siena.[14] Sir Laurence's sister Philippa “Pip” Street married the Australian Test cricketer and journalist John "Jack" Henry Webb Fingleton, OBE in 1942.[15]

Foreign Minister Anthony Street advising Prime Minister Malcolm Fraser at the 13th South Pacific Forum
Sir Laurence Street, 3rd Chief Justice of the family

He was buried with a state funeral at the Sydney Opera House Concert Hall in July 2018.[16] In an elegy before 700, incumbent Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull spoke of his mentor: "As a barrister, he was as eloquent as he was erudite, as formidable as he was fashionable […] Laurence had movie star good looks coupled with a charisma, charm and intellect, a humility, a humanity that swept all before him […] His nickname, Lorenzo the Magnificent, was well earned."[17] Incumbent Chief Justice of Australia Tom Bathurst remembered Sir Laurence as "one of the outstanding jurists of the 20th century."[18]

Susan Gai Watt, AM (born 1932) was the first wife of Sir Laurence Street and the first female chair of the Eastern Sydney Health Service (overseer of hospitals). She is the daughter of Ernest Alexander Stuart Watt (1874-1954), a shipping heir by whom she is the niece of Lieutenant-Colonel Walter Oswald Watt, OBE, the granddaughter of John Brown Watt, MLC, and the great-granddaughter of George Kenyon Holden, MLC.[19]

Anthony Austin Street, MP (born 1926), the son of Geoffrey Austin Street, also represented the seat of Corangamite, from 1966 to 1983. A naval veteran of World War II, he was Australia's Foreign Minister in the Fourth Fraser Ministry, from 1980 until 1983. He had previously served in the Third Fraser Ministry as Minister for Employment and Industrial Relations and Minister for Industrial Relations. Prior to that, he had served in the Second Fraser Ministry as Minister for Employment and Industrial Relations.[20]

Recent generations

By his first wife, Susan Gai (née Watt), formerly Lady Street, Sir Laurence had four children: Kenneth, Sylvia, Alexander and Sarah.[21] Kenneth Street is a businessman based in New South Wales. By his wife Sarah Street (née Kinross), he has three children. Judge Sylvia Emmett, AM (née Street) is a judge of the Federal Circuit Court of Australia and a Lieutenant-Commander of the Royal Australian Naval Reserve. She graduated from Sydney Law School (LLB) and is married to Justice Arthur Emmett, AO, QC, a federal judge and Challis Lecturer in Roman Law at Sydney Law School. Arthur became a judge of the New South Wales Court of Appeal in 2013 after 15 years as a judge of the Federal Circuit Court. Judge Alexander "Sandy" Whistler Street, SC is also a judge of the Federal Circuit Court of Australia and a Commander of the Royal Australian Naval Reserve. He has four children by two wives. Sarah Whistler Farley (née Street) is a businesswoman and board member of the Prince of Wales Hospital Foundation and the Jessie Street Trust. She graduated from Sydney Law School (LLB) and has four children by her husband, financier Gerard Farley.[22] Jessie Street is Sir Laurence's only child by his second wife and widow Lady (Penelope; née Ferguson) Street. She holds a Juris Doctor degree from Sydney Law School and is the god-daughter of HRH Charles, Prince of Wales.[23]

See also

References

  1. Karen Fox (17 February 2015). "Australian Legal Dynasties: The Stephens and the Streets". Australian Dictionary of Biography. National Centre of Biography, Australian National University. Retrieved 27 July 2018.
  2. https://www.smh.com.au/national/sir-laurence-street-the-very-model-of-a-modern-chief-justice-20180622-p4zn3f.html
  3. Mitchell Library, State Library of New South Wales: Street family - further papers, 1861 - 1972
  4. "Mr John Rendell Street (1832 - 1891)". Former Members. Parliament of New South Wales. 2008. Retrieved 5 July 2015.
  5. S. J. Butlin, Foundations of the Australian Monetary System, 1788-1851 (Melb, 1953)
  6. Bennett, J. M. Australian Dictionary of Biography. National Centre of Biography, Australian National University. Retrieved 5 May 2018 via Australian Dictionary of Biography.
  7. "Obituary - Lawrence Whistler (Larry) Street - Obituaries Australia". oa.anu.edu.au. Retrieved 5 May 2018.
  8. Bennett, J. M. Australian Dictionary of Biography. National Centre of Biography, Australian National University. Retrieved 5 May 2018 via Australian Dictionary of Biography.
  9. Australian Royalty https://australianroyalty.net.au/individual.php?pid=I30770&ged=purnellmccord.ged
  10. Coltheart, Lenore, '"Red Jessie": Jessie Street', in Uncommon Lives, National Archives of Australia, 2004, http://uncommonlives.naa.gov.au/jessie-street/.
  11. Radi, Heather. Australian Dictionary of Biography. National Centre of Biography, Australian National University. Retrieved 5 May 2018 via Australian Dictionary of Biography.
  12. "Obituary - Geoffrey Austin Street - Obituaries Australia". oa.anu.edu.au. Retrieved 5 May 2018.
  13. https://www.disputescentre.com.au/vale-sir-laurence-street/
  14. "The Honourable Sir Laurence Whistler Street". www.supremecourt.justice.nsw.gov.au. Retrieved 5 May 2018.
  15. Wisden 1982 – Obituary – Jack Fingleton". Wisden. 1982. Retrieved 21 May 2007.
  16. https://www.afr.com/business/legal/sir-laurence-street-remembered-as-an-outstanding-jurist-20161013-gs1uzk
  17. https://www.afr.com/business/legal/sir-laurence-street-remembered-as-a-man-for-all-seasons-20180705-h12at2
  18. https://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/news/nsw/prime-minister-leads-tributes-at-state-funeral-for-former-chief-justice/news-story/9ee9bc39345ca285b6329895c7c7eb7d?memtype=anonymous
  19. Irving, T. H. Australian Dictionary of Biography. National Centre of Biography, Australian National University. Retrieved 5 May 2018 via Australian Dictionary of Biography.
  20. "Ministries and Cabinets". Parliamentary Handbook. Parliament of Australia. Archived from the original on 8 October 2012. Retrieved 25 July 2016.
  21. "Dynasties The Street Family ABC2 Television Guide". www.abc.net.au.
  22. https://www.jessiestreettrust.org.au/thetrust
  23. https://www.smh.com.au/national/sir-laurence-street-the-very-model-of-a-modern-chief-justice-20180622-p4zn3f.html
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