Clarence McKerihan
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Sir Clarence Roy McKerihan (6 May 1896 – 28 December 1969), also known as Roy McKerihan or C. R. McKerihan, was an Australian banker who served as a commissioner and President of the
Rural Bank of New South Wales In general, a rural area or a countryside is a geographic area that is located outside towns and city, cities. Typical rural areas have a low population density and small settlements. Agriculture, Agricultural areas and areas with forestry ty ...
for 27 years from 1933 to 1961.


Early life and career

McKerihan was born on 6 May 1896 in Tenterfield in the
Colony of New South Wales The Colony of New South Wales was a colony of the British Empire from 1788 to 1901, when it became a State of the Commonwealth of Australia. At its greatest extent, the colony of New South Wales included the present-day Australian states of New ...
, the son of
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Irish-born draper Edward McKerihan and the Australian-born Elizabeth Jane Gillespie of Inverell. His name was chosen by his parents for the Clarence River, in a tribute to his family that had settled in the region. Edward McKerihan was a shopkeeper, and McKerihan received his education from state schools in Tamworth, Tenterfield, and later at the Superior Public School in Casino, where his father had set up business and became a prominent citizen through his service on the councils of St Andrew's Presbyterian Church Grafton, the Casino District Hospital, and the Casino Cricket Union. While at school McKerihan undertook six years' of service in the Casino brigade of the
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.NAA: B2455 (First Australian Imperial Force Personnel Dossiers, 1914-1920), MCKERIHAN C R, National Archives of Australia, accessed 18 December 2022. In 1912, McKerihan began work as a junior clerk in the Casino branch of the
Government Savings Bank of New South Wales A government is the system or group of people governing an organized community, generally a State (polity), state. In the case of its broad associative definition, government normally consists of legislature, Executive (government), e ...
, passed his NSW Institute of Bankers examination, and later moved in 1913 to the branch in
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, where his parents had moved. With the outbreak of war in 1914, at the age of 19 McKerihan enlisted in the Australian Imperial Force at Grafton on 26 May 1915, and was assigned to the 4th Battalion as a private departing Australia for Egypt on 16 June 1915. McKerihan was deployed to
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with the 4th Battalion and served during the
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. Following evacuation back to
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, Egypt, McKerihan was transferred to the 56th Battalion and promoted to lance corporal (29 September 1915), corporal (1 January 1916), and lance sergeant (14 February 1916). His brother, Harold George McKerihan, also served in Gallipoli as a lieutenant in the 2nd Battalion, where he was wounded and later died of his wounds in hospital in Alexandria. In March 1916, he transferred to the Australian War Records Section, and saw service in France and Britain, being promoted to staff sergeant and then
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in 1917. While on leave in September 1917 he undertook a trip to scale Mont Blanc in the Alps with a fellow soldier. In 1919 he was awarded the Meritorious Service Medal, and returned to Australia on 15 May 1919 aboard the HMAT ''Orontes''. Following demobilisation and discharge in Australia on 7 September 1919, McKerihan returned to work at the Government Savings Bank, being appointed a loans officer at the bank head office at 11 Moore Street (later known as Martin Place) in Sydney, and later transferred to the rural department on its creation in 1921. On 17 August 1921 he married Dorothy Juanita McCallum at St Stephen's Presbyterian Church, Sydney. The marriage would produce two daughters, Dawn and Dell. After initially living in Bondi, from 1930 the McKerihans moved to a house, "Wingadee", 1 Davidson Parade, Cremorne, before moving to a flat in the
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"Silchester" building at 4 Trahlee Road, Bellevue Hill, from 1937. From 1943, the McKerihans were living in a house at 895 New South Head Road, Rose Bay. By 1925 he had become president of the Government Savings Bank Officers' Association and in 1926 was vice-president and later president (1928) of the United Bank Officers' Association. In 1928 at the age of 32, McKerihan was appointed as chief clerk of the Rural Bank Department and was appointed a
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(JP) in November 1929.


Rural Bank

By early 1931, the Government Savings Bank was in financial trouble in the midst of the Great Depression, and on 22 April 1931 the Bank suspended payments after a drain on its cash resources. On 15 December 1931, the majority of the Government Savings Bank was amalgamated into the
Commonwealth Savings Bank The Commonwealth Bank of Australia (CBA), or CommBank, is an Australian multinational bank with businesses across New Zealand, Asia, the United States and the United Kingdom. It provides a variety of financial services including retail, busines ...
. The Rural Bank and Advance Homes Departments of the Government Savings Bank were not taken over by the Commonwealth Savings Bank, and continued to operate. In late 1932, the NSW Government led by Assistant Treasurer Eric Spooner introduced legislation to reconstitute what remained of the Government Savings Bank into a new "
Rural Bank of New South Wales In general, a rural area or a countryside is a geographic area that is located outside towns and city, cities. Typical rural areas have a low population density and small settlements. Agriculture, Agricultural areas and areas with forestry ty ...
", with a specific mandate to support primary industries and not to operate as a traditional general lending bank, governed by a board of three commissioners. On 23 December 1932, the ''Rural Bank of New South Wales Act, 1932'' was passed by the NSW Parliament, and on 1 July 1933 the new institution and board of commissioners commenced operations to replace the old Government Savings Bank. McKerihan was appointed to serve as one of the first three commissioners of the Bank, alongside William O'Malley Wood (president, and former chairman of the GSB) and Henry Rogers. O'Malley's term as president was intended to be a temporary one to facilitate the establishment of the new institution, and he retired in April 1934, with McKerihan at age 38 appointed to succeed him as president and general manager of the Rural Bank, commencing from 18 April 1934. McKerihan's appointment was praised for his young age and country background, with the ''
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'' noting: During his long term as president of the bank, McKerihan was responsible for transitioning the bank out of the depression by encouraging greater investment in building and construction, for increasing assistance to rural small-holders, and liberalising advances and loans for rural housing. In 1953 the Rural Bank Homes Department was estimated to have made over 65,000 advances for a total of , with rural advances up to , since McKerihan had commenced his term as the bank's head. McKerihan also led the efforts to build a new bank head office, acquiring a site on Martin Place for . Designed in the modern Art Deco style by the bank's chief architect, Frank William Turner, McKerihan laid one of the foundation stones in an official ceremony on 19 December 1935. The building was officially completed on 15 December 1936. The grand new edifice of the bank that was completed in December 1936 was praised for its dignified presentation and for its high proportion of Australian materials used in its construction. With the outbreak of the Second World War, in March 1940 McKerihan was appointed honorary general secretary and federal administrator of the
Australian Comforts Fund Australian Comforts Fund (ACF) was an Australian umbrella organisation for voluntary bodies set up after the outbreak of World War I. Many men and women worked at the ACF, including Alice Berry and Cyril Docker in WW2. World War I The Australi ...
, which distributed various supplies and funds for the wellbeing, as well as providing hostels, for Australian services abroad. McKerihan had responsibility for coordinating the distribution of the various state funds and ensuring that comforts received priority. He permitted the executive committee to hold its Sydney meetings in the board room of the Rural Bank at Martin Place, and provided administrative assistance to the organisation through Rural Bank staff, ensuring that administrative costs of the ACF funds remained limited to only 3%. In August 1944 and July 1945, he undertook a tour of the ACF field facilities in New Guinea and Borneo, and then to occupied Japan in August 1945, and advocated for the importance of the comforts fund to soldiers following the end of the war in 1945, arguing it would be outrageous to reduce funds while services remained deployed overseas. McKerihan remained as the head of the bank until his retirement after 27 years in May 1961. When he commenced his term as a bank commissioner in 1933, the bank had no branches and a staff of 310; this had increased to 57 branches and a staff of 1,500 in 1945, and by the time of his retirement in 1961, the Rural Bank had 134 branches.


Later life

In 1938, McKerihan was appointed a director, and served as president (1946–1963), of the
Crown Street Women's Hospital Crown Street Women's Hospital (now-closed) was once the largest maternity hospital in Sydney, New South Wales, Australia. It was located at 351 Crown Street (corner of Crown and Albion Streets), Surry Hills. The hospital was one of severa ...
, and would chair the hospital's board until his retirement in 1963. A member of the
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, and the Rotary and
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clubs of Sydney, McKerihan also held positions as president of the
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(NSW), councillor of the Australian-American Association, treasurer of the United Nations Association of Australia, trustee of
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(1956–1963), federal director of the Arts Council of Australia, and an
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and deacon of St Stephen's Presbyterian Church, Macquarie Street. McKerihan was also a member of the Australian Club, the
Royal Sydney Golf Club Royal Sydney Golf Club is golf club in Rose Bay, New South Wales, Australia, a suburb of Sydney. Founded in 1893, Royal Sydney is one of Australia's premier sporting and social clubs. It features an 18-hole Championship Course, a 9-hole Centen ...
, and the Rose Bay Bowling Club. A recipient of many awards, McKerihan was made a Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE) in the 1958 New Year Honours, and was made a Knight bachelor in the 1967 New Year Honours for "services to the rural community and to hospital and other welfare services". He was knighted by the
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, in a ceremony at Government House, Canberra on 31 March 1967. Survived by his wife and two daughters, he died at the age of 73 on 28 December 1969 at St Luke's Hospital, Potts Point, and was cremated.


Honours

* Meritorious Service Medal,
1914–15 Star The 1914–15 Star is a campaign medal of the British Empire which was awarded to officers and men of British and Imperial forces who served in any theatre of the First World War against the Central European Powers during 1914 and 1915. The me ...
, British War Medal, Victory Medal, 1919. *
King George V Silver Jubilee Medal The King George V Silver Jubilee Medal is a commemorative medal, instituted to celebrate the 25th anniversary of the accession of King George V. Issue This medal was awarded as a personal souvenir by King George V to commemorate his Silver J ...
, 1935. *
King George VI Coronation Medal The King George VI Coronation Medal was a commemorative medal, instituted to celebrate the coronation of King George VI and Queen Elizabeth. Issue This medal was awarded as a personal souvenir of King George VI's coronation. It was awarded to th ...
, 1937. *
Queen Elizabeth II Coronation Medal The Queen Elizabeth II Coronation Medal (french: link=no, Médaille du couronnement de la Reine Élizabeth II) is a commemorative medal instituted to celebrate the coronation of Queen Elizabeth II on 2 June 1953. Award This medal was awarded a ...
, 1953. *Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE),
1958 New Year Honours The New Year Honours 1958 were appointments in many of the Commonwealth realms of Queen Elizabeth II to Orders and decorations of the Commonwealth realms, various orders and honours to reward and highlight good works by citizens of those countries ...
. * Knight bachelor,
1967 New Year Honours Events January * January 1 – Canada begins a year-long celebration of the 100th anniversary of Confederation, featuring the Expo 67 World's Fair. * January 5 ** Spain and Romania sign an agreement in Paris, establishing full consular and ...
.


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:McKerihan, Clarence Roy 1896 births 1969 deaths People from Sydney Australian people of Irish descent Australian people of Scottish descent Australian Presbyterians Australian Army soldiers Australian bankers Australian chairpersons of corporations Australian chief executives Australian Knights Bachelor Australian Commanders of the Order of the British Empire Military personnel from New South Wales National Trust of Australia (NSW) State Bank of New South Wales