Famille-Family - Fiche individuelle-Person Sheet
Famille-Family - Fiche individuelle-Person Sheet
Alfred Horatio MARTIN 136
°9 May 1883, Cosham, Hampshire, England, UK136
+31 Mar 1953, Ryde, New South Wales, Australia136
Occupationpsychologue
EducationUniversity of Sydney (B.A., 1917; M.A., 1919), Columbia University, United States of America (Ph.D., 1921)
Père-FatherEdwin Paddon MARTIN (1846-1891)
Mère-MotherFrances Mary Ralph GREEN (1850-1935)
Misc. Notes


MARTIN, ALFRED HORATIO (1883-1953), psychologist, was born on 9 May 1883 at Cosham, Hampshire, England, third son of Edwin Paddon Martin (d.1891), a master linen draper, and his wife Frances Mary Ralph, née Green. In 1886 the Martins emigrated to Sydney where Edwin opened a mercery and drapery store at Petersham. With his death, the family was impoverished. Alfred left school at the age of 13 and worked briefly in the Treasury before being employed as a pupil-teacher, from June 1898 at Camdenville Public School. In 1902 he attended Fort Street Training School. He taught in Sydney, and at Narrabri (1907-11) and Glen Innes (1911-13). At St Cyprian's Anglican Church, Narrabri, on 16 September 1911 he married Bertha Christina Ross, a fellow schoolteacher.

Posted to Granville Public School in 1913, Martin became a part-time student at the University of Sydney (B.A., 1917; M.A., 1919). He twice graduated with first-class honours and the University medal in philosophy. Awarded the James King of Irrawang travelling scholarship in 1919, he studied experimental psychology under E. L. Thorndike and R. S. Woodworth at Teachers College, Columbia University (Ph.D., 1921), United States of America. Martin returned to Sydney in 1921 and joined Henry Tasman Lovell, associate-professor of psychology at the university; he was given responsibility for teaching experimental psychology, and for setting up an experimental laboratory.

A foundation member (1923) and general secretary (1923-28) of the Australasian Association of Psychology and Philosophy, Martin was a prolific contributor to its journal. In October 1926, with the assistance of the Sydney Chamber of Commerce, he established the Australian Institute of Industrial Psychology. Under his directorship it pioneered—especially during the 1930s—the construction and application of aptitude tests for vocational guidance and selection. He used the institute as an adjunct to his work at the university: many of the theories which he expounded to his students were put into practice at the institute. He encouraged the A.I.I.P. to provide a number of community services, including a 'Worry Clinic' for young job-seekers and their parents, lectures and radio broadcasts on basic and applied psychology, and a range of pamphlets. The institute's role declined during World War II due to its failure to procure army contracts.

Martin was an imposing figure, barrel chested and square chinned, with a sharp wit and quick mind. He was known for his abrasiveness and short temper. In 1947 he accepted a position at the University of Tasmania. Arriving in Hobart early in 1948, he suffered a debilitating stroke in late March and was forced to return to Sydney. He entered the New South Wales Home for Incurables, Ryde. Survived by his wife and two daughters, he died there of complications of cerebral and vascular disease on 31 March 1953 and was cremated. His daughter Leonie became a prominent psychologist in Hobart. Martin was a pioneer in his field. Although not an original thinker, he adapted the best of overseas developments in applied psychology for use in Australia.
Select Bibliography

People (Sydney), 5 July 1950, p 8; P. D. L. Brandon, Alfred Horatio Martin, 1883-1953: Educationalist and Pioneer in Industrial Psychology in New South Wales (B.Ed. thesis, University of Newcastle, 1993); teacher's record (State Records New South Wales and Dept of Education Archives, Sydney); University of Sydney Archives.

Author: Peter Brandon

Print Publication Details: Peter Brandon, 'Martin, Alfred Horatio (1883 - 1953)', Australian Dictionary of Biography, Volume 15, Melbourne University Press, 2000, pp 312-313.
Footer information

* (A-Z) Martens, Conrad (1801 - 1878)
* (A-Z) Martin, A136


An experimental study of the factors and types of voluntary choice,
Alfred Horatio Martin, New York, 1922. (4 éditions)
234Published also as thesis (PH. D.) Columbia university, 1922.

Vocational psychology,
Alfred Horatio Martin, Brisbane, Australia, University of Queensland, 1933 (2 éditions)234

Vocational and industrial psychology, Alfred Horatio Martin [Sydney, Publicity Press Ltd., 1933?]234

Psychometrics.
Alfred Horatio Martin, Sydney, Dymock's Book Arcade, 1947.234

Psychology in outline
Alfred Horatio Martin, Sydney : Dymocks, 1945. (3rd ed., rev. and enl | 2 éditions)234

Welcome home serviceman! An important address to civilians
Alfred Horatio Martin, [Sydney, Shepherd & Newman pty. Ltd., printers, 1944?]234

Co-operation versus communism a review and a five month plan for our industrial recovery,
L Messey; Alfred Horatio Martin, Sydney, Industrial Engineering Corp. [1932]234

The work of the industrial psychologist : address delivered at meeting of members of the Institute of Industrial Management, Australia, at Assembly Hall, Melbourne, on October 5, 1943
A H Martin; Institute of Industrial Management (Australia), [Melbourne : Institute of Industrial Management?, 1943?]234
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