Joseph Peter Gardiner was born in Adelaide on 4 July 1886. He was educated at the Christian Brothers College in that city, and was then apprenticed to his bootmaker father in West Perth. Later he went to the Pilbara region, where he traded on the coast between Cossack and Broome. He was secretary of the Miners' Union at Whim Creek, and from 1910 to 1912 was manager of the Weld Hotel in Cossack.[2]
In May 1914, Gardiner secretly married May Holman – daughter of his parliamentary colleague John Holman – at the Perth Registry Office, but the marriage was never consummated and a divorce was finalised in 1920.[3]
Shortly after the marriage, Gardiner left the State, never to return. After an extended absence from Parliament, inquiries were eventually made as to his whereabouts. When it was learned that he had left the State, Gardiner's seat was declared vacant on 30 September 1915, on the grounds of non-attendance. The Labor Party did not retain the seat in the subsequent by-election, and its majority of two was erased. Shortly afterwards, another Labor member resigned, and John Scaddan's government was defeated.[citation needed]
Later life
Little is known of the rest of Gardiner's life. After he left Western Australia, Gardiner went to South Australia, then to Victoria where he enlisted in early 1916.[3]
He was working as a labourer in Adelaide in 1921, and in June of that year, he married Bertha Annie Paver. He subsequently worked at various occupations while living for many years in Melbourne, Victoria.[2]
From 1932, he lived at Bentleigh, Victoria. He was listed on the Victorian electoral rolls as a "journalist" when he died on 23 January 1965.[2]
Notes
^compare this with Findlay, Len (2008) Left, said Fred, West Weekend Magazine, 15 March 2008, p. 8 - and Fred Riebeling's comments re this event
^ abc"Joseph Peter Gardiner". Biographical Register of Members of the Parliament of Western Australia. Parliament of Western Australia. Retrieved 1 August 2023.
Black, David (1981). "Party Politics in Turmoil". In Stannage, C. T. (ed.). A New History of Western Australia. Nedlands, Western Australia: University of Western Australia Press. ISBN0-85564-170-3.
Black, David (1981). "The Era of Labor Ascendancy". In Stannage, C. T. (ed.). A New History of Western Australia. Nedlands, Western Australia: University of Western Australia Press. ISBN0-85564-170-3.