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Home > About the Academy > Biographical memoirs
BIOGRAPHICAL MEMOIRS
James Alexander Forrest 1905-1990
By D.W. Rogers
This memoir was originally published in Historical Records of Australian Science, vol.8, no.4, 1991.
James Alexander Forrest
was born at Kerang, Victoria, on 10 March 1905. He was the third
of five children born to John Forrest and Mary Forrest (née
Gray) both of whom were in turn born in Scotland. There were three
sons and two daughters of the marriage. John Forrest was a general
store manager, first in Kerang and later in Cohuna from whence
he retired to Serrell Street in the Melbourne suburb of East Malvern.
Forrest lived with his parents at that address until shortly before
he married.
James Forrest, or 'Jim' as he was known, was educated at State
schools and later at Caulfield Grammar School where he matriculated
and was a school prefect. On leaving school his ambition was to
study medicine but the necessary funding was not available, and
presumably as a stop-gap he responded successfully to an advertisement
for a filing clerk at the solicitors' firm of Hedderwick Fookes
& Alston at 103 William Street in Melbourne. He commenced
work there in July 1923. At the end of that year he applied for
articles of clerkship and admission to the five-year articled
clerks' course at the University of Melbourne. Unfortunately Mr
Bruce Hedderwick, to whom he was to have been articled, went overseas
early in 1924 without signing the deed of articles and subsequently
died in Canada. It was by then too late to enrol at the University
and it was therefore not until the following year, in 1925, that
Forrest commenced the course as a five-year articled clerk, articled
to Mr T.C. Alston. (This course was discontinued some years ago.
It involved attendance at University lectures in the early morning
and evening, and legal work in the Master's office for the balance
of the day. On successful completion of examinations, the candidate
did not receive a degree but was qualified to be admitted as a
Barrister and Solicitor.)
Forrest was admitted to practice in 1930. His admission was moved
by Mr R.G. Menzies Q.C.
and Mr Wilfred Fullagar (later The Hon. Mr Justice Sir Wilfred
Fullagar of the High Court of Australia). The Court was presided
over by the Chief Justice, Sir William Irvine later Governor
of Victoria. He was admitted to partnership in Hedderwick Fookes
& Alston in 1933 and began to consolidate his reputation as
an outstanding young commercial lawyer. About this time he came
to the notice of the influential Grimwade family and became a
director of their family company, Felton Grimwade & Duerdin.
The Grimwades were also involved in the establishment of Australian
Glass Manufacturers (AGM) which acquired a great number of glass
manufacturers in the '20s and '30s. These they used as an adjunct
in the supply of bottles to their drug manufacturing and pharmacy
business, later to be known as Drug Houses of Australia (DHA).
When Forrest became a partner in Hedderwick Fookes & Alson,
Mr T.C. (Tom) Alston was senior partner and substantial owner
of the firm. Other partners were Mr Percy Coates (commonly known
as 'Plonker') and Colin (later Sir Colin) Syme who although only
two years Forrest's senior was already a director of BHP. The
firm had at that time a very large mortgage register. It employed
a large number of chartered accountants and accounts clerks and
provided legal and accounting services to a significant number
of the larger grazier families in Victoria and the Riverina. The
firm was also very involved in the liquor and hotel industries
through such clients as 'Jimmy' Richardson, the Morell and McCracken
families, and the Melbourne Co-operative Brewery, the registered
office of which was at 103 William Street.
The firm gradually was weaned away by Syme and Forrest from what
had been its core business and from the domination of the senior
chartered accountants in the firm, until by the late 1940s it
had become one of Australia's leading commercial firms. Alston
died in 1950 still the substantial owner of the firm, leaving
his partners with a heavy financial indebtedness to his estate.
Coates had retired in the late '30s and Syme and Forrest were
rejoined by S.C.G. ('Jock') Macindoe who had been a P.O.W. in
Germany for four years. Macindoe became a partner in 1948 and
together these three exercised a collective degree of directorial
and forensic influence in the State of Victoria and the Commonwealth,
the likes of which will probably never be seen again.
Jim Forrest served as a Flight Lieutenant in RAAF Intelligence
during the Second World War and later in the Department of Aircraft
Production.
After the war Forrest returned to practice. He had married Mary
Armit in December 1939. There are three sons of the marriage -
Alex, an engineer, Bill, a solicitor and later a partner in the
firm, and Hugh, an agricultural scientist. Mary Armit's family
were early settlers in East Gippsland and were connected to the
pioneering Mitchell and Morrison families.
In the late 1930s and the 1940s, Australian Glass Manufacturers
had greatly diversified under its Managing Director W.J. ('Gunboat')
Smith and became Australian Consolidated Industries Ltd. (ACI).
Jim Forrest was invited to join the Board in 1950 and in 1953
he became Chairman. W.J. Smith was a man of considerable intellect
and strength who treated his Board with scant respect and paid
little regard to its deliberations. Jim Forrest patiently set
about restoring the Board's position. Smith, who was by this time
beyond what is now the statutory retiring age for directors, resisted
strongly. The show-down occurred in the Hedderwick Fookes &
Alton office in 1956 when Forrest dismissed the man who next to
Essington Lewis was the most powerful executive in the country.
It was a signal victory for the board of ACI and for the corporate
community. The W.J. Smith affair had a profound effect on Forrest
and it was not for many years that a company of which he was Chairman
had an executive on its board.
In 1945 Forrest became a director of the branch Board of the AMP
Society and was Chairman from 1957 to 1977. He was a director
of the Society's principal Board from 1961 to 1977 and a very
significant contributor to the affairs of Australia's largest
life company.
In 1950 he was elected to the Board of what was then known as
the National Bank of Australasia Ltd. (NBA) and from 1959 to 1978
he was the Bank's Chairman. He also chaired the Board of the joint
venture merchant bank Chase-NBA from its inception in 1969 until
1980.
During this extremely active period as a ompany director, Forrest
managed to keep his legal skills right up to the mark. He had
a photographic memory for law reports and statute law and was
an original member of the Victoria Law Foundation.
At the request of Sir Douglas Menzies of the High Court, Jim Forrest
became a foundation member of the Council of Monash University
on which he served from 1961 to 1971. In 1979 the University conferred
on him an Honorary LL.D. in recognition of his services to the
University and to the law and commerce.
Forrest was knighted in 1967 for services to industry and the
law. He remained however a most unpretentious man who shunned
publicity and power. He always drove a 'Holden' motor car and
maintained a modest lifestyle. He worked extremely long hours
and believed that hard work would overcome any number of shortcomings.
In 1970 Sir Lindesay Clark, then Chairman of Western Mining Corporation
(WMC), persuaded Sir James to join the Board of that company and
at the same time to become Chairman of Alcoa of Australia Ltd.,
a joint venture with Aluminium Company of America. He remained
a director of WMC until 1977 and of Alcoa until the following
year. He retired from all boards of listed companies on reaching
the statutory retirement age but remained a director of several
unlisted companies, including Alcoa of Australia, for a short
period thereafter.
Life did not always proceed smoothly. When Geoff Grimwade, the
Chairman and Chief Executive of DHA, died suddenly in 1959, Forrest
found himself unexpectedly Chairman of DHA. The Grimwade family
was still very much involved with the company, which became the
subject of a take-over offer in 1966 from the Slater Walker organization
of the UK, then at the peak of its powers as an asset stripper.
The take-over was hostile but eventually the DHA Board felt that
the offer price was advantageous to the shareholders and recommended
its acceptance, to the intense annoyance of a number of influential
shareholders. It is now a matter of historical interest only,
that Slater Walker ran the company down before it collapsed itself
in the crash of the early 1970s and Jim Slater, the previous chief
executive officer, was prosecuted and convicted in the UK for
offences under the Companies Act. DHA was eventually placed in
liquidation.
On the ACI side, however, the company progressed from strength
to strength. Agreements were reached with overseas manufacturers
for manufacture (under licence) of products such as float glass,
fibre glass, plastics including plastic bottles, and a very sophisticated
line of glassware and fittings. The company also coped successfully
with competition in areas where it had hitherto held a virtual
monopoly. There was vigorous growth in Asia, with glass plants
in Singapore and Thailand, both of which were market leaders in
the Asian bottled beverage market. Forrest surprised the business
world in 1974 by appointing a public servant, Robert Brack, as
chief executive of ACI. Brack had formerly been Collector of Customs
for New South Wales and after his appointment he participated
with Forrest in a number of diversifying developments. Forrest
had of course been a public servant himself during the last three
years of the Second World War when he formed a high opinion of
the work habits and skills of senior public servants. The company
underwent a number of merger, executive and directorial changes
after his retirement in 1977 and it was eventually taken-over
to form part of the BTR group of the UK (now known in Australia
as BTR Nylex). For a number of years Forrest had been de facto
the Chief Executive of ACI and the loss of its corporate identity
must have wounded him greatly.
Although in many ways an extremely private man, he was outspoken
on issues of professional and corporate morality and would never
shirk an issue. To dissemble in any way was not part of his nature
and he usually spoke his mind in terms which were at times colourful.
Many a young lawyer had reason to regret a lack of preparation
or inadequate drafting skills.
He was an enthusiastic if somewhat indifferent golfer who was
a member of Riversdale and later Royal Melbourne Golf Clubs. He
was also a member of the leading men's clubs in Melbourne and
Sydney and for a time was President of the Australian Club in
Melbourne.
In addition to his demanding commercial and legal obligations,
Sir James found time for membership of various charitable and
educational bodies. In particular he was a member of the Federal
Council of the Boy Scouts Association for 25 years, of the Scotch
College Council and of the Royal Children's Hospital Research
Foundation, and a Governor of the London House for Overseas Graduates.
As previously mentioned, he was also a member of the Victoria
Law Foundation and of the Council of Monash University.
He made the acquaintance of The Hon. R.G. Menzies Q.C. early in
his legal career and maintained a friendship with him throughout
his life. When Menzies retired from public life, Sir James was
instrumental in raising a capital sum that assisted Sir Robert
and Dame Patti to acquire the first house they had owned for many
years.
Sir James was senior partner of Hedderwick Fookes & Alston
after Colin Syme's retirement in 1967, until he in turn retired
in 1970 to concentrate more fully on his corporate career. He
remained on as a consultant until 1973, thus completing fifty
years with the firm.
The firm merged with Arthur Robinson & Co. in 1984 when Jock
Macindoe also retired. Although Sir James seemed outwardly relaxed
about the merger, it is doubtful that he really approved. The
decade since his retirement had seen great changes in the practice
of the law and in communications and data processing. Medium-sized
firms like the two merging practices would have had great difficulty
surviving in the kind of practices they enjoyed. The merger has
undoubtedly been a great success. Sir James became ill a short
time before his death on 26 September 1990. Until then he remained,
even in retirement, his old ebullient and at times irascible self.
He took the view that his private papers were indeed private and
they were destroyed. If there are any inaccuracies in this memoir,
they are due to the author's inadequate recollection.
When Sir James retired as Chairman of ACI in March 1977 on his
72nd birthday, 'Chanticleer' in the Financial Review wrote
a lengthy review of his career in ACI entitled 'Sir James Forrest
our most successful lawyer director' Whilst some might take issue
with this description, there is no doubt that he enjoyed a career
of enormous influence and achievement. Those of us who were lucky
enough to have been his colleagues will forever be in his debt.
On hearing of his death, the Thai Glass Company was instrumental
in setting up in Thailand a fund entitled 'In memory of the late
Sir James Forrest of Melbourne, Australia', the interest of which
is used to provide scholarships for needy Thai children in rural
areas. Both Sir James and Lady Forrest were widely known in Thailand
and maintained a lasting interest in the affairs of that country.
Sir James, who was elected to the Australian Academy of Science
by Special Election in 1977, served on the Finance Committee of
the Academy for over twenty years and was a Fellow for thirteen
years. He also served on the Academy's Science and Industry Forum.
The press release at the date of his appointment was as follows:
The Australian Academy of Science has elected to its Fellowship
a distinguished businessman and financier, Sir James Forrest.
Sir James, who holds positions on the boards of a number of companies
and educational institutions and has served on the Finance Committee
of the Academy for 10 years, joined the Fellowship by Special
Election at the Academy's annual meeting.
The distinction of Special Election to the Fellowship is reserved
for persons who have rendered conspicuous service to the cause
of science, or whose election would be of signal benefit to the
Academy and to the advancement of science.
Other Fellows by Special Election are Sir Robert Menzies, Dr H.C.
Coombs, Sir Maurice Mawby and Sir Ellerton Becker.
D.W. Rogers, Arthur Robinson & Hedderwicks, Melbourne.
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