Childhood and education
Donald Allan Dunstan was born on 21 September 1926 in Fiji, of South
Australian parents. His father was the Fiji manager for Adelaide
Steamship Co. An asthmatic child, he was sent for health reasons to
Murray Bridge, South Australia to live with relatives. He returned to
Fiji briefly for some of his secondary schooling, where he made
friends among the local Indian and Fijian children and dismayed white
colonials by refusing to share their racial prejudices. He returned
to Adelaide to complete his secondary schooling at St Peter's College
as a day boy, living with relatives in Glenelg.
He went on to study Law and Classics at Adelaide University, working in
theatre and radio to finance his studies. In his undergraduate years,
he became involved with the ALP and trade union activities.
Early career and first marriage
On graduation in 1948, he practised law in Fiji for a short time before
returning to Adelaide early in 1951 and became involved in Labor
politics while developing a legal practice. He married his first
wife, Gretel, in 1949, and they had three children, Bronwen, Andrew
and Paul.
After being elected to State Parliament in 1953 as member for Norwood (at
the time considered a safe Liberal seat), Dunstan set about
establishing himself as a reformer intent on winning government. In
1965, when Labor finally came to power under Premier Frank Walsh, he
was appointed Attorney-General, Minister for Social Welfare and
Minister for Aboriginal Affairs.
Premiership
When Walsh stepped down in 1967 he was elected leader and became Premier
for a short time, until Labor lost government the next year to the
Liberal Country League under Steele Hall, despite gaining 53% of the
vote. Hall introduced legislation to change the electoral boundaries,
and in the 1970 elections Labor was returned to power and the Dunstan
decade began in earnest. He remained Premier and Treasurer, as well
as taking on several other portfolios until 1979, when he was forced
to resign due to ill health.
In 1974, he and his first wife divorced after a two-year separation. In
1976, Dunstan married Adele Koh, a journalist, who had joined his
staff as research assistant in 1973 having been expelled from
Singapore during a press crackdown. Their marriage was a short one,
however, as she died from cancer in 1978.
Achievements
As Attorney General and Premier, Dunstan achieved an unprecedented
series of social, cultural and political reforms. He was a strong
believer in individual rights, and introduced anti-discrimination
legislation to protect the rights of women, homosexuals and
aborigines. He was the originator in government of aboriginal land
rights, and his voice within the ALP helped end the federal White
Australia policy. He set up an environmental portfolio in the
government, and was responsible for the development of conservation
and environmental programmes in the State. He also introduced
consumer protection legislation, and relaxed censorship and supported
the rights of young people to express their views.
He was a driving force behind the establishment of the Festival Centre,
and helped expand the Adelaide Festival of Arts. He set up the SA
Film Corporation and the Jam Factory, an outlet for local craft
workers.
As Attorney General, he extended drinking hours from six o'clock closing
which was then in force. He changed licensing laws to allow outdoor
eating and drinking, and to allow cellar door sales at wineries. In
1976 he opened Rundle Mall, turning a congested city street into the
pedestrian precinct we know today. His unconventional attitude to
dress led the way for a relaxation of the State's rigid suit and tie
dress code in business and government.
Post-political career
In 1982 he was appointed head of the Victorian Tourism Commission, but
returned to Adelaide in 1986 after falling out with the Cain
government. He then opened a restaurant, Don's Table, in Norwood, in
partnership with his friend Stephen Cheng. The restaurant ran into
severe financial problems a few months before Dunstan's death in
1999, and has now closed.
Dunstan died at his Norwood home on 6th February 1999, having succumbed to
the cancer which had been threatening for several years.
Biographical information taken from Adelaide Review, March 1999 and The
Advertiser, 8-12 February 1999 and information in the Dunstan Collection.
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