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Gordon Coates

The Right Honourable
Joseph Gordon Coates
MC*
Joseph Gordon Coates.jpg
21st Prime Minister of New Zealand
In office
30 May 1925 – 10 December 1928
Monarch George V
Governor-General Charles Fergusson
Preceded by Francis Bell
Succeeded by Joseph Ward
Member of the New Zealand Parliament
for Kaipara
In office
1911–1943
Preceded by John Stallworthy
Succeeded by Clifton Webb
Personal details
Born (1878-02-03)3 February 1878
Hukatere, New Zealand
Died 27 May 1943(1943-05-27) (aged 65)
Wellington, New Zealand
Political party Reform
Spouse(s) Marjorie Coles (m.1914)
Children 5
Religion Anglican
Awards MC and bar
Military service
Allegiance New Zealand Army
Years of service 1916-18
Rank British&Commonwealth-Army-Maj(1920-1953).svg Major
Battles/wars World War I

Joseph Gordon Coates, MC and bar (3 February 1878 – 27 May 1943) served as the 21st Prime Minister of New Zealand from 1925 to 1928. He was the third successive Reform prime minister since 1912.

Later, serving as Minister of Public Works (1931–33) and of Finance (1933–35), he instituted rigorous policies to combat the economic depression of the 1930s.

Born at Ruatuna in Hukatere in Kaipara Harbour, New Zealand, where his family ran a farm, Coates took on significant responsibility at a relatively early age because his father suffered from bipolar disorder. He received a basic education at a local school, and his well-educated mother also tutored him. He became an accomplished horseman, although an accident left him with a bad leg for the rest of his life. The large Māori population of the area meant that Coates grew up proficient in the Māori language. Gossip suggests that before his marriage, Coates had two children by a Māori woman. He allegedly became engaged to Eva Ingall, a teacher, but her father forbade marriage on the grounds that the illness of Coates' father might prove hereditary. Eventually, in 1914, he married Marjorie Grace Coles, by whom he had five daughters.

Coates first became involved in politics through the Otamatea County Council, to which he won election in 1905. Later, from 1913 to 1916, he served as the Council's chairman. He had previously distinguished himself as commander of the Otamatea Mounted Rifle Volunteers, and had a good local reputation. In the 1911 elections, Coates won the Kaipara seat, having stood as an independent candidate aligned with the Liberal Party. In Parliament he generally voted with the Liberals, and formed part of the group that allowed Joseph Ward to keep his position as Prime Minister. When Ward resigned and Thomas Mackenzie replaced him, Coates declined the offer of a ministerial position.


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