Book review: The High Commissioners: Australia's representatives in the United Kingdom, 1910-2010
journal contribution
posted on 2010-09-01, 00:00authored byChristopher Waters
The post of Australian High Commissioner in London has always been one of the most important and prestigious of Australia’s diplomatic posts. Indeed, as The High Commissioners demonstrates, for much of the one hundred years for which the post has existed it was an influential link between two parts of the British Empire, rather than a diplomatic mission in a foreign nation. It was for a long time a diplomatic post, but of a hybrid nature; an evolving child of empire. This handsomely produced book is a scholarly study of the position and of the many high commissioners. The chapters, which examine all the high commissioners and a range of related subjects, have been authored by many of Australia’s leading historians of empire and of foreign policy,
with the most recent high commissioners covered by former government officials. While the book is designed as a celebration of the centenary of the Australian High Commission in London it is not a work of hagiography. Important analyses are presented of the strengths and weaknesses of many of the key high commissioners,
such as George Reid, Andrew Fisher, S.M. Bruce, Alexander Downer senior and John
Armstrong. Indeed, the book leaves the strong impression that some of the high
commissioners, especially after the Second World War, were often well behind the
Australian people in appreciating how the relationship between Australia and the
United Kingdom was changing. The research and writing is of a uniformly high
standard with each chapter providing many interesting insights into the history of
Australian foreign policy.