Robert Stout
September 28, 2012
On this date in 1844, New Zealand statesman Sir Robert Stout
was born in the Shetland Isles, Scotland. He was educated in parish
schools, qualified as a student teacher at age 13, then as a surveyor in
1860. Stout emigrated to New Zealand in 1863. After teaching in
Dunedin, he studied law and was admitted to the bar in 1871. He served
as a member of the Provincial Council of Otago in 1872, was Provincial
Solicitor from 1873-1876, and was first elected to the House of
Representatives in 1875 as a Liberal. He served as Attorney General and
Minister for Lands and Immigration from 1878-79. He became president of
the Dunedin Freethought Association in 1880, and also defended the
Auckland Rationalist Association when it was threatened with prosecution
for selling its magazine on Sundays. Stout eventually introduced a
bill, which passed, reducing Blue Law fines and restrictions. He was
often described at New Zealand's version of Charles Bradlaugh, a correspondent, and America's Robert Ingersoll.
He was returned to Parliament in 1884, and was Premier,
Attorney-General and Minister of Education from 1884-1887. He was
knighted in 1886. Stout promoted secondary schools, medical and welfare
services, and was sympathetic to the Maori and land reform. He passed
the Married Women's Property Act while Prime Minister. During his entire
political career he championed a secular educational system. Stout
returned to Parliament in time to finally see passage of women's
suffrage in 1893, a reform he had promoted. He was appointed Chief
Justice, serving from 1899-1926. He was also chancellor of the New
Zealand University (1903-1923). When he retired as Chief Justice, Stout
was appointed to the Legislative Council, where he immediately defended
secular education, which was under attack by religionists seeking to
introduce bible reading and prayers in school: "I fear that parliament
may set up a little state church to make people morally good . . . it
will make them immoral, for it will inaugurate bitterness and ill
feeling." He married Anna Paterson Logan, the daughter of social
reformers and freethinkers, and they had six children. D. 1930.
“We recognise no authority competent to dictate to us. Each must believe what he considers to be true and act up to his belief, granting the same right to everyone else.”
— Robert Stout, inaugural address as president of Dunedin Freethought Association, 1880
Compiled by Annie Laurie Gaylor - www.ffrf.org
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