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MARTHA RUTLEDGE
The first Leader of the Government in the Senate, Richard EdwardO’Connor, was born at Glebe, Sydney on 4 August 1851, the son of Richard O’Connor, librarian of the New South Wales Legislative Council and later Clerk of the Parliaments, and Mary Ann, néeHarnett.
CRICHTON-BROWNE, NOEL ASHLEY (1944– )SENATOR FOR WESTERN Senate Committee Service. Estimates Committee E, 1981–83, 1993–94; C, 1990, 1992–93. Scrutiny of Bills Committee, 1981–83. Select Committee on Government Clothing and Ordnance Factories, 1981–82 MCLEAN, PAUL ALEXANDER (1937– )SENATOR FOR NEW SOUTH WALES ‘Although I was not raised in poverty, I saw enough of it to understand it’ admitted Paul Alexander McLean. Born to Harold Penrose McLean and Kathleen McLean, née Collins, on 13 March 1937 in the Lake Macquarie suburb of Belmont in the Hunter region of NSW, he was raised by parents—’a coal miner and the daughter of a tin miner’—who instilled in their son a belief in the O’CHEE, WILLIAM GEORGE (1965– )SENATOR FOR QUEENSLAND Bill O’Chee was an unconventional parliamentarian: at twenty-four years of age he was the youngest person to sit in the Senate, the first with Chinese ancestry to be elected to the federal Parliament, and he was an Australian representative in world championship skeletonraces, an
BUTTFIELD, DAME NANCY EILEEN (1912–2005) SENATOR FOR SOUTH Nancy Eileen Buttfield, the first South Australian woman to enter state or federal parliament, and a community worker and public figure in Adelaide, was born on 12 November 1912 in Kensington Gardens, Adelaide, to Edward Wheewall (later Sir Edward) Holden and Hilda May,née Lavis.
LOOSLEY, STEPHEN (1952– )SENATOR FOR NEW SOUTH WALES, 1990 Senate Committee Service. Estimates Committee D, 1990–94; B, 1992; A, 1993–94. Joint Committee of Public Accounts, 1990–91. Joint Committee on the National Crime Authority, 1990–95 MATHESON, SIR ALEXANDER PERCEVAL (1861–1929)SENATOR FOR Alexander Matheson, merchant and developer, was born in Mayfair, London, on 6 February 1861, the eldest son of Sir Alexander Matheson, a Member of Parliament who was created a Baronet in 1882, and his third wife, Eleanor, née Perceval. SIDDONS, JOHN ROYSTON (1927–2016)SENATOR FOR VICTORIA John Royston Siddons was born in Melbourne, Victoria on 5 October 1927, the middle child and only son of Royston and Agnes Emily Siddons, née Smith. KENDALL, ROY (1899–1972) SENATOR FOR QUEENSLAND, 1950–65 This biography was first published in The Biographical Dictionary of the Australian Senate, vol. 3, 1962-1983, University of New South Wales Press Ltd, Sydney, 2010, pp. 286-291. TANGNEY, DAME DOROTHY MARGARET (1907–1985) SENATOR FOR In 1943 Dorothy Margaret Tangney became the first woman senator and the first Labor woman in either house of the federal Parliament. Tangney was born in North Perth, Western Australia, on 13 March 1907, though either through misinformation or artifice she provided 1911 as the year of her birth. She was the third of seven surviving children of Irish-born Eugene Tangney, timber mill worker and O’CONNOR, RICHARD EDWARD (1851–1912)SENATOR FOR NEW SOUTHAUTHOR:MARTHA RUTLEDGE
The first Leader of the Government in the Senate, Richard EdwardO’Connor, was born at Glebe, Sydney on 4 August 1851, the son of Richard O’Connor, librarian of the New South Wales Legislative Council and later Clerk of the Parliaments, and Mary Ann, néeHarnett.
CRICHTON-BROWNE, NOEL ASHLEY (1944– )SENATOR FOR WESTERN Senate Committee Service. Estimates Committee E, 1981–83, 1993–94; C, 1990, 1992–93. Scrutiny of Bills Committee, 1981–83. Select Committee on Government Clothing and Ordnance Factories, 1981–82 MCLEAN, PAUL ALEXANDER (1937– )SENATOR FOR NEW SOUTH WALES ‘Although I was not raised in poverty, I saw enough of it to understand it’ admitted Paul Alexander McLean. Born to Harold Penrose McLean and Kathleen McLean, née Collins, on 13 March 1937 in the Lake Macquarie suburb of Belmont in the Hunter region of NSW, he was raised by parents—’a coal miner and the daughter of a tin miner’—who instilled in their son a belief in the O’CHEE, WILLIAM GEORGE (1965– )SENATOR FOR QUEENSLAND Bill O’Chee was an unconventional parliamentarian: at twenty-four years of age he was the youngest person to sit in the Senate, the first with Chinese ancestry to be elected to the federal Parliament, and he was an Australian representative in world championship skeletonraces, an
BUTTFIELD, DAME NANCY EILEEN (1912–2005) SENATOR FOR SOUTH Nancy Eileen Buttfield, the first South Australian woman to enter state or federal parliament, and a community worker and public figure in Adelaide, was born on 12 November 1912 in Kensington Gardens, Adelaide, to Edward Wheewall (later Sir Edward) Holden and Hilda May,née Lavis.
LOOSLEY, STEPHEN (1952– )SENATOR FOR NEW SOUTH WALES, 1990 Senate Committee Service. Estimates Committee D, 1990–94; B, 1992; A, 1993–94. Joint Committee of Public Accounts, 1990–91. Joint Committee on the National Crime Authority, 1990–95 MATHESON, SIR ALEXANDER PERCEVAL (1861–1929)SENATOR FOR Alexander Matheson, merchant and developer, was born in Mayfair, London, on 6 February 1861, the eldest son of Sir Alexander Matheson, a Member of Parliament who was created a Baronet in 1882, and his third wife, Eleanor, née Perceval. SIDDONS, JOHN ROYSTON (1927–2016)SENATOR FOR VICTORIA John Royston Siddons was born in Melbourne, Victoria on 5 October 1927, the middle child and only son of Royston and Agnes Emily Siddons, née Smith. KENDALL, ROY (1899–1972) SENATOR FOR QUEENSLAND, 1950–65 This biography was first published in The Biographical Dictionary of the Australian Senate, vol. 3, 1962-1983, University of New South Wales Press Ltd, Sydney, 2010, pp. 286-291. MATHESON, SIR ALEXANDER PERCEVAL (1861–1929)SENATOR FOR Alexander Matheson, merchant and developer, was born in Mayfair, London, on 6 February 1861, the eldest son of Sir Alexander Matheson, a Member of Parliament who was created a Baronet in 1882, and his third wife, Eleanor, née Perceval. THE BIOGRAPHICAL DICTIONARY OF THE AUSTRALIAN SENATE NASH, Richard Harry (1890–1951)Senator for Western Australia, 1943–51 (Australan Labor Party) Richard Harry Nash was born on 2 July 1890 in Ascot Vale, Victoria, to Harry Avers Nash, a storeman, and Elizabeth Phoebe, née Stroud, who had emigrated from England. In 1897 Dick, as he was known, and his parents arrived in Kalgoorlie. O’CHEE, WILLIAM GEORGE (1965– )SENATOR FOR QUEENSLAND Bill O’Chee was an unconventional parliamentarian: at twenty-four years of age he was the youngest person to sit in the Senate, the first with Chinese ancestry to be elected to the federal Parliament, and he was an Australian representative in world championship skeletonraces, an
OLSEN, JOHN WAYNE (1945– )SENATOR FOR SOUTH AUSTRALIA John Wayne Olsen, Liberal Party Premier of South Australia 1996–2001, served two years in the Senate from 7 May 1990, when he filled a casual vacancy caused by the resignation of Senator Tony Messner.. A colourful backgrounder in the Australian on 29 November 1996, the day after he became Premier of South Australia, argued that there was a defining moment in Olsen’s life when he was ELLIOTT, ROBERT CHARLES DUNLOP (1884–1950) SENATOR FOR Robert Charles Dunlop Elliott (known as R. D.) was a businessman and newspaper proprietor, active in Country Party politics. He was born on 28 October 1884 at Kyneton, central Victoria, the fourth surviving child of Robert Cochrane Elliott, a grocer from Northumberland, England, who fell on hard times, and his wife, Maria Jeanette, née Williamson, a native of Inverness, Scotland. LATHAM, SIR CHARLES GEORGE (1882–1968) SENATOR FOR WESTERN Charles George Latham, wheat farmer and influential Country Party politician, believed in firm action. During the Depression of the 1930s he once suggested to Premier James Mitchell that a fire hose be turned upon a large crowd demonstrating outside the Treasury Building in St George’s Terrace, though Mitchell, it seems, did not take hisadvice.
SHORT, JAMES ROBERT (1936– )SENATOR FOR VICTORIA, 1985–97 James (Jim) Robert Short was born on 7 December 1936 at Shepparton, Victoria, the youngest of three children of George Short, a surveyor with the State Rivers and Water Supply Commission, and his wife,Elsie, née Hearn.
O’BYRNE, JUSTIN HILARY (1912–1993) SENATOR FOR TASMANIA On 20 June 1940 O’Byrne enlisted in the RAAF at Hobart. In November, he embarked for training in Ottawa, Canada. Commissioned as a pilot officer, O’Byrne travelled to Kirton-in-Lindsey in Lincolnshire, serving as a founding member of 452 Squadron, RAAF. GILES, PATRICIA JESSIE (1928–2017)SENATOR FOR WESTERN Pat Giles was born Patricia Jessie White, daughter of Eustace Frederick White, car salesman, shop keeper and accountant, and his wife Marjorie Eva, née Norris, schoolteacher, on KENDALL, ROY (1899–1972) SENATOR FOR QUEENSLAND, 1950–65 This biography was first published in The Biographical Dictionary of the Australian Senate, vol. 3, 1962-1983, University of New South Wales Press Ltd, Sydney, 2010, pp. 286-291. THE BIOGRAPHICAL DICTIONARY OF THE AUSTRALIAN SENATE Harry Evans, 2000. This web site presents biographies of Australian senators and clerks of the Senate who completed their service in the Senate between 1901 to 2002. The Biographical Dictionary of the Australian Senate was verified, edited and compiled in the Biographical Dictionary Unit of the Research Section of the AustralianSenate.
O’CONNOR, RICHARD EDWARD (1851–1912)SENATOR FOR NEW SOUTHAUTHOR:MARTHA RUTLEDGE
The first Leader of the Government in the Senate, Richard EdwardO’Connor, was born at Glebe, Sydney on 4 August 1851, the son of Richard O’Connor, librarian of the New South Wales Legislative Council and later Clerk of the Parliaments, and Mary Ann, néeHarnett.
TANGNEY, DAME DOROTHY MARGARET (1907–1985) SENATOR FOR In 1943 Dorothy Margaret Tangney became the first woman senator and the first Labor woman in either house of the federal Parliament. Tangney was born in North Perth, Western Australia, on 13 March 1907, though either through misinformation or artifice she provided 1911 as the year of her birth. She was the third of seven surviving children of Irish-born Eugene Tangney, timber mill worker and CRICHTON-BROWNE, NOEL ASHLEY (1944– )SENATOR FOR WESTERN Senate Committee Service. Estimates Committee E, 1981–83, 1993–94; C, 1990, 1992–93. Scrutiny of Bills Committee, 1981–83. Select Committee on Government Clothing and Ordnance Factories, 1981–82 BONNER, NEVILLE THOMAS (1922–1999) SENATOR FOR QUEENSLAND Neville Thomas Bonner, born ‘under a lone palm tree’ on 28 March 1922, at Ukerebagh Island, Tweed Heads, New South Wales, was a stockman and Aboriginal activist who believed it was in the best interest of his people to work for the Aboriginal cause within the existing political institutions of MULLAN, JOHN (1871–1941)SENATOR FOR QUEENSLAND, 1913–17 John Mullan, ‘a small, pugnacious figure, with a Paderewski-like mop of curly black hair’, impressed his contemporaries as ‘a fluent and somewhat combative debater, with a sprightly Irish wit . . . as nimble and elusive in the dialectical wrestling bouts of the debating floor as the fabled leprechaun of Irish folk-lore’. Mullan was born in Loughlinstown, near Dublin, Ireland, on 8 GORTON, SIR JOHN GREY (1911–2002) SENATOR FOR VICTORIA Commonwealth Parliament. Senator for Victoria, 1950–68 . Member of the House of Representatives for Higgins, Vic., 1968–75 . Prime Minister, 1968–71. Minister for the Navy, 1958–63. Minister Assisting the Minister for External Affairs, 1960–63 MATHESON, SIR ALEXANDER PERCEVAL (1861–1929)SENATOR FOR Alexander Matheson, merchant and developer, was born in Mayfair, London, on 6 February 1861, the eldest son of Sir Alexander Matheson, a Member of Parliament who was created a Baronet in 1882, and his third wife, Eleanor, née Perceval. LATHAM, SIR CHARLES GEORGE (1882–1968) SENATOR FOR WESTERN Charles George Latham, wheat farmer and influential Country Party politician, believed in firm action. During the Depression of the 1930s he once suggested to Premier James Mitchell that a fire hose be turned upon a large crowd demonstrating outside the Treasury Building in St George’s Terrace, though Mitchell, it seems, did not take hisadvice.
BUTTFIELD, DAME NANCY EILEEN (1912–2005) SENATOR FOR SOUTH Nancy Eileen Buttfield, the first South Australian woman to enter state or federal parliament, and a community worker and public figure in Adelaide, was born on 12 November 1912 in Kensington Gardens, Adelaide, to Edward Wheewall (later Sir Edward) Holden and Hilda May,née Lavis.
THE BIOGRAPHICAL DICTIONARY OF THE AUSTRALIAN SENATE Harry Evans, 2000. This web site presents biographies of Australian senators and clerks of the Senate who completed their service in the Senate between 1901 to 2002. The Biographical Dictionary of the Australian Senate was verified, edited and compiled in the Biographical Dictionary Unit of the Research Section of the AustralianSenate.
O’CONNOR, RICHARD EDWARD (1851–1912)SENATOR FOR NEW SOUTHAUTHOR:MARTHA RUTLEDGE
The first Leader of the Government in the Senate, Richard EdwardO’Connor, was born at Glebe, Sydney on 4 August 1851, the son of Richard O’Connor, librarian of the New South Wales Legislative Council and later Clerk of the Parliaments, and Mary Ann, néeHarnett.
TANGNEY, DAME DOROTHY MARGARET (1907–1985) SENATOR FOR In 1943 Dorothy Margaret Tangney became the first woman senator and the first Labor woman in either house of the federal Parliament. Tangney was born in North Perth, Western Australia, on 13 March 1907, though either through misinformation or artifice she provided 1911 as the year of her birth. She was the third of seven surviving children of Irish-born Eugene Tangney, timber mill worker and CRICHTON-BROWNE, NOEL ASHLEY (1944– )SENATOR FOR WESTERN Senate Committee Service. Estimates Committee E, 1981–83, 1993–94; C, 1990, 1992–93. Scrutiny of Bills Committee, 1981–83. Select Committee on Government Clothing and Ordnance Factories, 1981–82 BONNER, NEVILLE THOMAS (1922–1999) SENATOR FOR QUEENSLAND Neville Thomas Bonner, born ‘under a lone palm tree’ on 28 March 1922, at Ukerebagh Island, Tweed Heads, New South Wales, was a stockman and Aboriginal activist who believed it was in the best interest of his people to work for the Aboriginal cause within the existing political institutions of MULLAN, JOHN (1871–1941)SENATOR FOR QUEENSLAND, 1913–17 John Mullan, ‘a small, pugnacious figure, with a Paderewski-like mop of curly black hair’, impressed his contemporaries as ‘a fluent and somewhat combative debater, with a sprightly Irish wit . . . as nimble and elusive in the dialectical wrestling bouts of the debating floor as the fabled leprechaun of Irish folk-lore’. Mullan was born in Loughlinstown, near Dublin, Ireland, on 8 GORTON, SIR JOHN GREY (1911–2002) SENATOR FOR VICTORIA Commonwealth Parliament. Senator for Victoria, 1950–68 . Member of the House of Representatives for Higgins, Vic., 1968–75 . Prime Minister, 1968–71. Minister for the Navy, 1958–63. Minister Assisting the Minister for External Affairs, 1960–63 MATHESON, SIR ALEXANDER PERCEVAL (1861–1929)SENATOR FOR Alexander Matheson, merchant and developer, was born in Mayfair, London, on 6 February 1861, the eldest son of Sir Alexander Matheson, a Member of Parliament who was created a Baronet in 1882, and his third wife, Eleanor, née Perceval. LATHAM, SIR CHARLES GEORGE (1882–1968) SENATOR FOR WESTERN Charles George Latham, wheat farmer and influential Country Party politician, believed in firm action. During the Depression of the 1930s he once suggested to Premier James Mitchell that a fire hose be turned upon a large crowd demonstrating outside the Treasury Building in St George’s Terrace, though Mitchell, it seems, did not take hisadvice.
BUTTFIELD, DAME NANCY EILEEN (1912–2005) SENATOR FOR SOUTH Nancy Eileen Buttfield, the first South Australian woman to enter state or federal parliament, and a community worker and public figure in Adelaide, was born on 12 November 1912 in Kensington Gardens, Adelaide, to Edward Wheewall (later Sir Edward) Holden and Hilda May,née Lavis.
MATHESON, SIR ALEXANDER PERCEVAL (1861–1929)SENATOR FOR Alexander Matheson, merchant and developer, was born in Mayfair, London, on 6 February 1861, the eldest son of Sir Alexander Matheson, a Member of Parliament who was created a Baronet in 1882, and his third wife, Eleanor, née Perceval. GORTON, SIR JOHN GREY (1911–2002) SENATOR FOR VICTORIA Commonwealth Parliament. Senator for Victoria, 1950–68 . Member of the House of Representatives for Higgins, Vic., 1968–75 . Prime Minister, 1968–71. Minister for the Navy, 1958–63. Minister Assisting the Minister for External Affairs, 1960–63 MCLEAN, PAUL ALEXANDER (1937– )SENATOR FOR NEW SOUTH WALES ‘Although I was not raised in poverty, I saw enough of it to understand it’ admitted Paul Alexander McLean. Born to Harold Penrose McLean and Kathleen McLean, née Collins, on 13 March 1937 in the Lake Macquarie suburb of Belmont in the Hunter region of NSW, he was raised by parents—’a coal miner and the daughter of a tin miner’—who instilled in their son a belief in the QUIRKE, JOHN ANDREW (1950– )SENATOR FOR SOUTH AUSTRALIA QUIRKE, John Andrew (1950– ) Senator for South Australia, 1997–2000 (Australian Labor Party) O’CHEE, WILLIAM GEORGE (1965– )SENATOR FOR QUEENSLAND Bill O’Chee was an unconventional parliamentarian: at twenty-four years of age he was the youngest person to sit in the Senate, the first with Chinese ancestry to be elected to the federal Parliament, and he was an Australian representative in world championship skeletonraces, an
TURLEY, JOSEPH HENRY LEWIS (1859–1929)SENATOR FOR Joseph Henry Lewis (Harry) Turley, wharf labourer, trade unionist and first Labor President of the Senate, was born on 24 April 1859 at Burton St Michael, Gloucester, England, the son of Charles Turley, master shoemaker, and his wife, Agnes (Susan), née Oliver. ROBINSON, WILLIAM CHARLES (1907–1981) SENATOR FOR WESTERN ROBINSON, William Charles (1907–1981) Senator for Western Australia, 1952–53 (Australian Country Party) CAMERON, CYRIL ST CLAIR (1857–1941)SENATOR FOR TASMANIA Cyril St Clair Cameron, army officer and farmer, came from a northern Tasmanian family which produced four parliamentarians. Son of Donald Cameron, MLC, and Mary, née Morrison, he was born on 5 December 1857 at the family property, ‘Fordon’, Nile. KENDALL, ROY (1899–1972) SENATOR FOR QUEENSLAND, 1950–65 This biography was first published in The Biographical Dictionary of the Australian Senate, vol. 3, 1962-1983, University of New South Wales Press Ltd, Sydney, 2010, pp. 286-291. DRAFTING THE CONSTITUTION Drafting A Constitution. the draft of 1891 is the Constitution of 1900, not its father or grandfather. A meeting of representatives of each of the Australian colonies and New Zealand, called the National Australasian Convention, was held in Sydney from 2 March to 9 April1891.
THE BIOGRAPHICAL DICTIONARY OF THE AUSTRALIAN SENATE Harry Evans, 2000. This web site presents biographies of Australian senators and clerks of the Senate who completed their service in the Senate between 1901 to 2002. The Biographical Dictionary of the Australian Senate was verified, edited and compiled in the Biographical Dictionary Unit of the Research Section of the AustralianSenate.
MATHESON, SIR ALEXANDER PERCEVAL (1861–1929)SENATOR FORAUTHOR: BRIANDE GARIS
Alexander Matheson, merchant and developer, was born in Mayfair, London, on 6 February 1861, the eldest son of Sir Alexander Matheson, a Member of Parliament who was created a Baronet in 1882, and his third wife, Eleanor, née Perceval. SENIOR, WILLIAM (1850–1926)SENATOR FOR SOUTH AUSTRALIA On his retirement from the Senate, William Senior referred to himself as ‘that troublesome man who sat in the corner’ but, as we shall see, any trouble he caused was more the consequence of his conscience, than mere politicking. He was born at Holmfirth, near Huddersfield, Yorkshire, on 9 February 1850 to Thomas Senior, an engineer and farmer, and Charlotte, née Dennison. MCLEAN, PAUL ALEXANDER (1937– )SENATOR FOR NEW SOUTH WALES ‘Although I was not raised in poverty, I saw enough of it to understand it’ admitted Paul Alexander McLean. Born to Harold Penrose McLean and Kathleen McLean, née Collins, on 13 March 1937 in the Lake Macquarie suburb of Belmont in the Hunter region of NSW, he was raised by parents—’a coal miner and the daughter of a tin miner’—who instilled in their son a belief in the O’CHEE, WILLIAM GEORGE (1965– )SENATOR FOR QUEENSLAND Bill O’Chee was an unconventional parliamentarian: at twenty-four years of age he was the youngest person to sit in the Senate, the first with Chinese ancestry to be elected to the federal Parliament, and he was an Australian representative in world championship skeletonraces, an
QUIRKE, JOHN ANDREW (1950– )SENATOR FOR SOUTH AUSTRALIA QUIRKE, John Andrew (1950– ) Senator for South Australia, 1997–2000 (Australian Labor Party) BUTTFIELD, DAME NANCY EILEEN (1912–2005) SENATOR FOR SOUTH Nancy Eileen Buttfield, the first South Australian woman to enter state or federal parliament, and a community worker and public figure in Adelaide, was born on 12 November 1912 in Kensington Gardens, Adelaide, to Edward Wheewall (later Sir Edward) Holden and Hilda May,née Lavis.
MULLAN, JOHN (1871–1941)SENATOR FOR QUEENSLAND, 1913–17 John Mullan, ‘a small, pugnacious figure, with a Paderewski-like mop of curly black hair’, impressed his contemporaries as ‘a fluent and somewhat combative debater, with a sprightly Irish wit . . . as nimble and elusive in the dialectical wrestling bouts of the debating floor as the fabled leprechaun of Irish folk-lore’. Mullan was born in Loughlinstown, near Dublin, Ireland, on 8 SIDDONS, JOHN ROYSTON (1927–2016)SENATOR FOR VICTORIA John Royston Siddons was born in Melbourne, Victoria on 5 October 1927, the middle child and only son of Royston and Agnes Emily Siddons, née Smith. KENDALL, ROY (1899–1972) SENATOR FOR QUEENSLAND, 1950–65 This biography was first published in The Biographical Dictionary of the Australian Senate, vol. 3, 1962-1983, University of New South Wales Press Ltd, Sydney, 2010, pp. 286-291. THE BIOGRAPHICAL DICTIONARY OF THE AUSTRALIAN SENATE Harry Evans, 2000. This web site presents biographies of Australian senators and clerks of the Senate who completed their service in the Senate between 1901 to 2002. The Biographical Dictionary of the Australian Senate was verified, edited and compiled in the Biographical Dictionary Unit of the Research Section of the AustralianSenate.
MATHESON, SIR ALEXANDER PERCEVAL (1861–1929)SENATOR FORAUTHOR: BRIANDE GARIS
Alexander Matheson, merchant and developer, was born in Mayfair, London, on 6 February 1861, the eldest son of Sir Alexander Matheson, a Member of Parliament who was created a Baronet in 1882, and his third wife, Eleanor, née Perceval. SENIOR, WILLIAM (1850–1926)SENATOR FOR SOUTH AUSTRALIA On his retirement from the Senate, William Senior referred to himself as ‘that troublesome man who sat in the corner’ but, as we shall see, any trouble he caused was more the consequence of his conscience, than mere politicking. He was born at Holmfirth, near Huddersfield, Yorkshire, on 9 February 1850 to Thomas Senior, an engineer and farmer, and Charlotte, née Dennison. MCLEAN, PAUL ALEXANDER (1937– )SENATOR FOR NEW SOUTH WALES ‘Although I was not raised in poverty, I saw enough of it to understand it’ admitted Paul Alexander McLean. Born to Harold Penrose McLean and Kathleen McLean, née Collins, on 13 March 1937 in the Lake Macquarie suburb of Belmont in the Hunter region of NSW, he was raised by parents—’a coal miner and the daughter of a tin miner’—who instilled in their son a belief in the O’CHEE, WILLIAM GEORGE (1965– )SENATOR FOR QUEENSLAND Bill O’Chee was an unconventional parliamentarian: at twenty-four years of age he was the youngest person to sit in the Senate, the first with Chinese ancestry to be elected to the federal Parliament, and he was an Australian representative in world championship skeletonraces, an
QUIRKE, JOHN ANDREW (1950– )SENATOR FOR SOUTH AUSTRALIA QUIRKE, John Andrew (1950– ) Senator for South Australia, 1997–2000 (Australian Labor Party) BUTTFIELD, DAME NANCY EILEEN (1912–2005) SENATOR FOR SOUTH Nancy Eileen Buttfield, the first South Australian woman to enter state or federal parliament, and a community worker and public figure in Adelaide, was born on 12 November 1912 in Kensington Gardens, Adelaide, to Edward Wheewall (later Sir Edward) Holden and Hilda May,née Lavis.
MULLAN, JOHN (1871–1941)SENATOR FOR QUEENSLAND, 1913–17 John Mullan, ‘a small, pugnacious figure, with a Paderewski-like mop of curly black hair’, impressed his contemporaries as ‘a fluent and somewhat combative debater, with a sprightly Irish wit . . . as nimble and elusive in the dialectical wrestling bouts of the debating floor as the fabled leprechaun of Irish folk-lore’. Mullan was born in Loughlinstown, near Dublin, Ireland, on 8 SIDDONS, JOHN ROYSTON (1927–2016)SENATOR FOR VICTORIA John Royston Siddons was born in Melbourne, Victoria on 5 October 1927, the middle child and only son of Royston and Agnes Emily Siddons, née Smith. KENDALL, ROY (1899–1972) SENATOR FOR QUEENSLAND, 1950–65 This biography was first published in The Biographical Dictionary of the Australian Senate, vol. 3, 1962-1983, University of New South Wales Press Ltd, Sydney, 2010, pp. 286-291. MCLEAN, PAUL ALEXANDER (1937– )SENATOR FOR NEW SOUTH WALES ‘Although I was not raised in poverty, I saw enough of it to understand it’ admitted Paul Alexander McLean. Born to Harold Penrose McLean and Kathleen McLean, née Collins, on 13 March 1937 in the Lake Macquarie suburb of Belmont in the Hunter region of NSW, he was raised by parents—’a coal miner and the daughter of a tin miner’—who instilled in their son a belief in the TANGNEY, DAME DOROTHY MARGARET (1907–1985) SENATOR FOR In 1943 Dorothy Margaret Tangney became the first woman senator and the first Labor woman in either house of the federal Parliament. Tangney was born in North Perth, Western Australia, on 13 March 1907, though either through misinformation or artifice she provided 1911 as the year of her birth. She was the third of seven surviving children of Irish-born Eugene Tangney, timber mill worker and QUIRKE, JOHN ANDREW (1950– )SENATOR FOR SOUTH AUSTRALIA QUIRKE, John Andrew (1950– ) Senator for South Australia, 1997–2000 (Australian Labor Party) LOOSLEY, STEPHEN (1952– )SENATOR FOR NEW SOUTH WALES, 1990 Senate Committee Service. Estimates Committee D, 1990–94; B, 1992; A, 1993–94. Joint Committee of Public Accounts, 1990–91. Joint Committee on the National Crime Authority, 1990–95 CRANE, ARTHUR WINSTON (1941– )SENATOR FOR WESTERN Arthur Winston Crane (known as Winston) was born in Perth on 21 August 1941, one of seven children of farmer Arthur Crane and his wife Lavina, née Longman, from Bindi Bindi in the wheat belt north ofPerth.
CRICHTON-BROWNE, NOEL ASHLEY (1944– )SENATOR FOR WESTERN Senate Committee Service. Estimates Committee E, 1981–83, 1993–94; C, 1990, 1992–93. Scrutiny of Bills Committee, 1981–83. Select Committee on Government Clothing and Ordnance Factories, 1981–82 BUTTON, JOHN NORMAN (1932–2008)SENATOR FOR VICTORIA, 1974 BUTTON, John Norman (1932–2008) Senator for Victoria, 1974–93 (Australian Labor Party) O’BYRNE, JUSTIN HILARY (1912–1993) SENATOR FOR TASMANIA On 20 June 1940 O’Byrne enlisted in the RAAF at Hobart. In November, he embarked for training in Ottawa, Canada. Commissioned as a pilot officer, O’Byrne travelled to Kirton-in-Lindsey in Lincolnshire, serving as a founding member of 452 Squadron, RAAF. GLASSEY, THOMAS (1844–1936)SENATOR FOR QUEENSLAND, … D. J. Murphy (ed.), Labor in Politics: The State Labor Parties in Australia 1880–1920, UQP, St Lucia, Qld, 1975, p. 135; Letter, Glassey to Sir Josiah Symon, 18 GRIMES, DONALD JAMES (1937– )SENATOR FOR TASMANIA, 1974–87 Donald James (Don) Grimes was born in Albury, New South Wales, on 4 October 1937. He was the only son and eldest of two surviving children of Walter John Grimes, a fitter and turner with New South Wales Railways, and his wife Annie Mildred (Nancy), née O’Neill, who was a nurse before her marriage. THE BIOGRAPHICAL DICTIONARY OF THE AUSTRALIAN SENATE Harry Evans, 2000. This web site presents biographies of Australian senators and clerks of the Senate who completed their service in the Senate between 1901 to 2002. The Biographical Dictionary of the Australian Senate was verified, edited and compiled in the Biographical Dictionary Unit of the Research Section of the AustralianSenate.
THE BIOGRAPHICAL DICTIONARY OF THE AUSTRALIAN SENATE NASH, Richard Harry (1890–1951)Senator for Western Australia, 1943–51 (Australan Labor Party) Richard Harry Nash was born on 2 July 1890 in Ascot Vale, Victoria, to Harry Avers Nash, a storeman, and Elizabeth Phoebe, née Stroud, who had emigrated from England. In 1897 Dick, as he was known, and his parents arrived in Kalgoorlie. TANGNEY, DAME DOROTHY MARGARET (1907–1985) SENATOR FOR In 1943 Dorothy Margaret Tangney became the first woman senator and the first Labor woman in either house of the federal Parliament. Tangney was born in North Perth, Western Australia, on 13 March 1907, though either through misinformation or artifice she provided 1911 as the year of her birth. She was the third of seven surviving children of Irish-born Eugene Tangney, timber mill worker and MATHESON, SIR ALEXANDER PERCEVAL (1861–1929)SENATOR FOR Alexander Matheson, merchant and developer, was born in Mayfair, London, on 6 February 1861, the eldest son of Sir Alexander Matheson, a Member of Parliament who was created a Baronet in 1882, and his third wife, Eleanor, née Perceval. MCLEAN, PAUL ALEXANDER (1937– )SENATOR FOR NEW SOUTH WALES ‘Although I was not raised in poverty, I saw enough of it to understand it’ admitted Paul Alexander McLean. Born to Harold Penrose McLean and Kathleen McLean, née Collins, on 13 March 1937 in the Lake Macquarie suburb of Belmont in the Hunter region of NSW, he was raised by parents—’a coal miner and the daughter of a tin miner’—who instilled in their son a belief in the QUIRKE, JOHN ANDREW (1950– )SENATOR FOR SOUTH AUSTRALIA QUIRKE, John Andrew (1950– ) Senator for South Australia, 1997–2000 (Australian Labor Party) MULLAN, JOHN (1871–1941)SENATOR FOR QUEENSLAND, 1913–17 John Mullan, ‘a small, pugnacious figure, with a Paderewski-like mop of curly black hair’, impressed his contemporaries as ‘a fluent and somewhat combative debater, with a sprightly Irish wit . . . as nimble and elusive in the dialectical wrestling bouts of the debating floor as the fabled leprechaun of Irish folk-lore’. Mullan was born in Loughlinstown, near Dublin, Ireland, on 8 LATHAM, SIR CHARLES GEORGE (1882–1968) SENATOR FOR WESTERN Charles George Latham, wheat farmer and influential Country Party politician, believed in firm action. During the Depression of the 1930s he once suggested to Premier James Mitchell that a fire hose be turned upon a large crowd demonstrating outside the Treasury Building in St George’s Terrace, though Mitchell, it seems, did not take hisadvice.
BUTTFIELD, DAME NANCY EILEEN (1912–2005) SENATOR FOR SOUTH Nancy Eileen Buttfield, the first South Australian woman to enter state or federal parliament, and a community worker and public figure in Adelaide, was born on 12 November 1912 in Kensington Gardens, Adelaide, to Edward Wheewall (later Sir Edward) Holden and Hilda May,née Lavis.
KENDALL, ROY (1899–1972) SENATOR FOR QUEENSLAND, 1950–65 This biography was first published in The Biographical Dictionary of the Australian Senate, vol. 3, 1962-1983, University of New South Wales Press Ltd, Sydney, 2010, pp. 286-291. THE BIOGRAPHICAL DICTIONARY OF THE AUSTRALIAN SENATE Harry Evans, 2000. This web site presents biographies of Australian senators and clerks of the Senate who completed their service in the Senate between 1901 to 2002. The Biographical Dictionary of the Australian Senate was verified, edited and compiled in the Biographical Dictionary Unit of the Research Section of the AustralianSenate.
THE BIOGRAPHICAL DICTIONARY OF THE AUSTRALIAN SENATE NASH, Richard Harry (1890–1951)Senator for Western Australia, 1943–51 (Australan Labor Party) Richard Harry Nash was born on 2 July 1890 in Ascot Vale, Victoria, to Harry Avers Nash, a storeman, and Elizabeth Phoebe, née Stroud, who had emigrated from England. In 1897 Dick, as he was known, and his parents arrived in Kalgoorlie. TANGNEY, DAME DOROTHY MARGARET (1907–1985) SENATOR FOR In 1943 Dorothy Margaret Tangney became the first woman senator and the first Labor woman in either house of the federal Parliament. Tangney was born in North Perth, Western Australia, on 13 March 1907, though either through misinformation or artifice she provided 1911 as the year of her birth. She was the third of seven surviving children of Irish-born Eugene Tangney, timber mill worker and MATHESON, SIR ALEXANDER PERCEVAL (1861–1929)SENATOR FOR Alexander Matheson, merchant and developer, was born in Mayfair, London, on 6 February 1861, the eldest son of Sir Alexander Matheson, a Member of Parliament who was created a Baronet in 1882, and his third wife, Eleanor, née Perceval. MCLEAN, PAUL ALEXANDER (1937– )SENATOR FOR NEW SOUTH WALES ‘Although I was not raised in poverty, I saw enough of it to understand it’ admitted Paul Alexander McLean. Born to Harold Penrose McLean and Kathleen McLean, née Collins, on 13 March 1937 in the Lake Macquarie suburb of Belmont in the Hunter region of NSW, he was raised by parents—’a coal miner and the daughter of a tin miner’—who instilled in their son a belief in the QUIRKE, JOHN ANDREW (1950– )SENATOR FOR SOUTH AUSTRALIA QUIRKE, John Andrew (1950– ) Senator for South Australia, 1997–2000 (Australian Labor Party) MULLAN, JOHN (1871–1941)SENATOR FOR QUEENSLAND, 1913–17 John Mullan, ‘a small, pugnacious figure, with a Paderewski-like mop of curly black hair’, impressed his contemporaries as ‘a fluent and somewhat combative debater, with a sprightly Irish wit . . . as nimble and elusive in the dialectical wrestling bouts of the debating floor as the fabled leprechaun of Irish folk-lore’. Mullan was born in Loughlinstown, near Dublin, Ireland, on 8 LATHAM, SIR CHARLES GEORGE (1882–1968) SENATOR FOR WESTERN Charles George Latham, wheat farmer and influential Country Party politician, believed in firm action. During the Depression of the 1930s he once suggested to Premier James Mitchell that a fire hose be turned upon a large crowd demonstrating outside the Treasury Building in St George’s Terrace, though Mitchell, it seems, did not take hisadvice.
BUTTFIELD, DAME NANCY EILEEN (1912–2005) SENATOR FOR SOUTH Nancy Eileen Buttfield, the first South Australian woman to enter state or federal parliament, and a community worker and public figure in Adelaide, was born on 12 November 1912 in Kensington Gardens, Adelaide, to Edward Wheewall (later Sir Edward) Holden and Hilda May,née Lavis.
KENDALL, ROY (1899–1972) SENATOR FOR QUEENSLAND, 1950–65 This biography was first published in The Biographical Dictionary of the Australian Senate, vol. 3, 1962-1983, University of New South Wales Press Ltd, Sydney, 2010, pp. 286-291. MATHESON, SIR ALEXANDER PERCEVAL (1861–1929)SENATOR FOR Alexander Matheson, merchant and developer, was born in Mayfair, London, on 6 February 1861, the eldest son of Sir Alexander Matheson, a Member of Parliament who was created a Baronet in 1882, and his third wife, Eleanor, née Perceval. REYNOLDS, MARGARET (1941– )SENATOR FOR QUEENSLAND, 1982–99 Margaret Reynolds, activist, educator and author, was born Margaret Lyne, in Hobart on 19 July 1941, the only child of Walter Rodis (Rod) Lyne and his wife Jess, née Montgomery, a teacher. BUTTFIELD, DAME NANCY EILEEN (1912–2005) SENATOR FOR SOUTH Nancy Eileen Buttfield, the first South Australian woman to enter state or federal parliament, and a community worker and public figure in Adelaide, was born on 12 November 1912 in Kensington Gardens, Adelaide, to Edward Wheewall (later Sir Edward) Holden and Hilda May,née Lavis.
CRANE, ARTHUR WINSTON (1941– )SENATOR FOR WESTERN Arthur Winston Crane (known as Winston) was born in Perth on 21 August 1941, one of seven children of farmer Arthur Crane and his wife Lavina, née Longman, from Bindi Bindi in the wheat belt north ofPerth.
ELLIOTT, HAROLD EDWARD (1878–1931) SENATOR FOR VICTORIA Harold Edward Elliott, was born at West Charlton in north-west Victoria on 19 June 1878. He was the fifth of eight children of Thomas Elliott and his wife Helen, née Janverin, who had arrived in Victoria during the gold rushes of the 1850s. NEGUS, SYDNEY AMBROSE (1912–1986) SENATOR FOR WESTERN This biography was first published in The Biographical Dictionary of the Australian Senate, vol. 3, 1962-1983, University of New South Wales Press Ltd, Sydney, 2010, pp. 526-531. CAMERON, CYRIL ST CLAIR (1857–1941)SENATOR FOR TASMANIA Cyril St Clair Cameron, army officer and farmer, came from a northern Tasmanian family which produced four parliamentarians. Son of Donald Cameron, MLC, and Mary, née Morrison, he was born on 5 December 1857 at the family property, ‘Fordon’, Nile. O’BYRNE, JUSTIN HILARY (1912–1993) SENATOR FOR TASMANIA On 20 June 1940 O’Byrne enlisted in the RAAF at Hobart. In November, he embarked for training in Ottawa, Canada. Commissioned as a pilot officer, O’Byrne travelled to Kirton-in-Lindsey in Lincolnshire, serving as a founding member of 452 Squadron, RAAF. COLSTON, MALCOLM ARTHUR (1938–2003)SENATOR FOR QUEENSLAND Malcolm Arthur Colston was born in Brisbane on 5 April 1938, the eldest child of Douglas Thomas Colston, a carpenter, and his wife Myrtle Clorine Ruby, née THE OPENING, 9 MAY 1901 Opening of Federal Parliament, Exhibition Building, Melbourne, 9 May 1901. The first Commonwealth parliamentarians are shown assembled on a low platform before the Duke of York and the Governor-General, in the Melbourne Exhibition Building. Prime Minister Edmund Barton stands centre front, flanked by members of the Ministry. THE BIOGRAPHICAL DICTIONARY OF THE AUSTRALIAN SENATE Harry Evans, 2000. This web site presents biographies of Australian senators and clerks of the Senate who completed their service in the Senate between 1901 to 2002. The Biographical Dictionary of the Australian Senate was verified, edited and compiled in the Biographical Dictionary Unit of the Research Section of the AustralianSenate.
THE BIOGRAPHICAL DICTIONARY OF THE AUSTRALIAN SENATE NASH, Richard Harry (1890–1951)Senator for Western Australia, 1943–51 (Australan Labor Party) Richard Harry Nash was born on 2 July 1890 in Ascot Vale, Victoria, to Harry Avers Nash, a storeman, and Elizabeth Phoebe, née Stroud, who had emigrated from England. In 1897 Dick, as he was known, and his parents arrived in Kalgoorlie. TANGNEY, DAME DOROTHY MARGARET (1907–1985) SENATOR FOR In 1943 Dorothy Margaret Tangney became the first woman senator and the first Labor woman in either house of the federal Parliament. Tangney was born in North Perth, Western Australia, on 13 March 1907, though either through misinformation or artifice she provided 1911 as the year of her birth. She was the third of seven surviving children of Irish-born Eugene Tangney, timber mill worker and MATHESON, SIR ALEXANDER PERCEVAL (1861–1929)SENATOR FOR Alexander Matheson, merchant and developer, was born in Mayfair, London, on 6 February 1861, the eldest son of Sir Alexander Matheson, a Member of Parliament who was created a Baronet in 1882, and his third wife, Eleanor, née Perceval. MCLEAN, PAUL ALEXANDER (1937– )SENATOR FOR NEW SOUTH WALES ‘Although I was not raised in poverty, I saw enough of it to understand it’ admitted Paul Alexander McLean. Born to Harold Penrose McLean and Kathleen McLean, née Collins, on 13 March 1937 in the Lake Macquarie suburb of Belmont in the Hunter region of NSW, he was raised by parents—’a coal miner and the daughter of a tin miner’—who instilled in their son a belief in the QUIRKE, JOHN ANDREW (1950– )SENATOR FOR SOUTH AUSTRALIA QUIRKE, John Andrew (1950– ) Senator for South Australia, 1997–2000 (Australian Labor Party) MULLAN, JOHN (1871–1941)SENATOR FOR QUEENSLAND, 1913–17 John Mullan, ‘a small, pugnacious figure, with a Paderewski-like mop of curly black hair’, impressed his contemporaries as ‘a fluent and somewhat combative debater, with a sprightly Irish wit . . . as nimble and elusive in the dialectical wrestling bouts of the debating floor as the fabled leprechaun of Irish folk-lore’. Mullan was born in Loughlinstown, near Dublin, Ireland, on 8 LATHAM, SIR CHARLES GEORGE (1882–1968) SENATOR FOR WESTERN Charles George Latham, wheat farmer and influential Country Party politician, believed in firm action. During the Depression of the 1930s he once suggested to Premier James Mitchell that a fire hose be turned upon a large crowd demonstrating outside the Treasury Building in St George’s Terrace, though Mitchell, it seems, did not take hisadvice.
BUTTFIELD, DAME NANCY EILEEN (1912–2005) SENATOR FOR SOUTH Nancy Eileen Buttfield, the first South Australian woman to enter state or federal parliament, and a community worker and public figure in Adelaide, was born on 12 November 1912 in Kensington Gardens, Adelaide, to Edward Wheewall (later Sir Edward) Holden and Hilda May,née Lavis.
KENDALL, ROY (1899–1972) SENATOR FOR QUEENSLAND, 1950–65 This biography was first published in The Biographical Dictionary of the Australian Senate, vol. 3, 1962-1983, University of New South Wales Press Ltd, Sydney, 2010, pp. 286-291. THE BIOGRAPHICAL DICTIONARY OF THE AUSTRALIAN SENATE Harry Evans, 2000. This web site presents biographies of Australian senators and clerks of the Senate who completed their service in the Senate between 1901 to 2002. The Biographical Dictionary of the Australian Senate was verified, edited and compiled in the Biographical Dictionary Unit of the Research Section of the AustralianSenate.
THE BIOGRAPHICAL DICTIONARY OF THE AUSTRALIAN SENATE NASH, Richard Harry (1890–1951)Senator for Western Australia, 1943–51 (Australan Labor Party) Richard Harry Nash was born on 2 July 1890 in Ascot Vale, Victoria, to Harry Avers Nash, a storeman, and Elizabeth Phoebe, née Stroud, who had emigrated from England. In 1897 Dick, as he was known, and his parents arrived in Kalgoorlie. TANGNEY, DAME DOROTHY MARGARET (1907–1985) SENATOR FOR In 1943 Dorothy Margaret Tangney became the first woman senator and the first Labor woman in either house of the federal Parliament. Tangney was born in North Perth, Western Australia, on 13 March 1907, though either through misinformation or artifice she provided 1911 as the year of her birth. She was the third of seven surviving children of Irish-born Eugene Tangney, timber mill worker and MATHESON, SIR ALEXANDER PERCEVAL (1861–1929)SENATOR FOR Alexander Matheson, merchant and developer, was born in Mayfair, London, on 6 February 1861, the eldest son of Sir Alexander Matheson, a Member of Parliament who was created a Baronet in 1882, and his third wife, Eleanor, née Perceval. MCLEAN, PAUL ALEXANDER (1937– )SENATOR FOR NEW SOUTH WALES ‘Although I was not raised in poverty, I saw enough of it to understand it’ admitted Paul Alexander McLean. Born to Harold Penrose McLean and Kathleen McLean, née Collins, on 13 March 1937 in the Lake Macquarie suburb of Belmont in the Hunter region of NSW, he was raised by parents—’a coal miner and the daughter of a tin miner’—who instilled in their son a belief in the QUIRKE, JOHN ANDREW (1950– )SENATOR FOR SOUTH AUSTRALIA QUIRKE, John Andrew (1950– ) Senator for South Australia, 1997–2000 (Australian Labor Party) MULLAN, JOHN (1871–1941)SENATOR FOR QUEENSLAND, 1913–17 John Mullan, ‘a small, pugnacious figure, with a Paderewski-like mop of curly black hair’, impressed his contemporaries as ‘a fluent and somewhat combative debater, with a sprightly Irish wit . . . as nimble and elusive in the dialectical wrestling bouts of the debating floor as the fabled leprechaun of Irish folk-lore’. Mullan was born in Loughlinstown, near Dublin, Ireland, on 8 LATHAM, SIR CHARLES GEORGE (1882–1968) SENATOR FOR WESTERN Charles George Latham, wheat farmer and influential Country Party politician, believed in firm action. During the Depression of the 1930s he once suggested to Premier James Mitchell that a fire hose be turned upon a large crowd demonstrating outside the Treasury Building in St George’s Terrace, though Mitchell, it seems, did not take hisadvice.
BUTTFIELD, DAME NANCY EILEEN (1912–2005) SENATOR FOR SOUTH Nancy Eileen Buttfield, the first South Australian woman to enter state or federal parliament, and a community worker and public figure in Adelaide, was born on 12 November 1912 in Kensington Gardens, Adelaide, to Edward Wheewall (later Sir Edward) Holden and Hilda May,née Lavis.
KENDALL, ROY (1899–1972) SENATOR FOR QUEENSLAND, 1950–65 This biography was first published in The Biographical Dictionary of the Australian Senate, vol. 3, 1962-1983, University of New South Wales Press Ltd, Sydney, 2010, pp. 286-291. MATHESON, SIR ALEXANDER PERCEVAL (1861–1929)SENATOR FOR Alexander Matheson, merchant and developer, was born in Mayfair, London, on 6 February 1861, the eldest son of Sir Alexander Matheson, a Member of Parliament who was created a Baronet in 1882, and his third wife, Eleanor, née Perceval. REYNOLDS, MARGARET (1941– )SENATOR FOR QUEENSLAND, 1982–99 Margaret Reynolds, activist, educator and author, was born Margaret Lyne, in Hobart on 19 July 1941, the only child of Walter Rodis (Rod) Lyne and his wife Jess, née Montgomery, a teacher. BUTTFIELD, DAME NANCY EILEEN (1912–2005) SENATOR FOR SOUTH Nancy Eileen Buttfield, the first South Australian woman to enter state or federal parliament, and a community worker and public figure in Adelaide, was born on 12 November 1912 in Kensington Gardens, Adelaide, to Edward Wheewall (later Sir Edward) Holden and Hilda May,née Lavis.
CRANE, ARTHUR WINSTON (1941– )SENATOR FOR WESTERN Arthur Winston Crane (known as Winston) was born in Perth on 21 August 1941, one of seven children of farmer Arthur Crane and his wife Lavina, née Longman, from Bindi Bindi in the wheat belt north ofPerth.
ELLIOTT, HAROLD EDWARD (1878–1931) SENATOR FOR VICTORIA Harold Edward Elliott, was born at West Charlton in north-west Victoria on 19 June 1878. He was the fifth of eight children of Thomas Elliott and his wife Helen, née Janverin, who had arrived in Victoria during the gold rushes of the 1850s. NEGUS, SYDNEY AMBROSE (1912–1986) SENATOR FOR WESTERN This biography was first published in The Biographical Dictionary of the Australian Senate, vol. 3, 1962-1983, University of New South Wales Press Ltd, Sydney, 2010, pp. 526-531. CAMERON, CYRIL ST CLAIR (1857–1941)SENATOR FOR TASMANIA Cyril St Clair Cameron, army officer and farmer, came from a northern Tasmanian family which produced four parliamentarians. Son of Donald Cameron, MLC, and Mary, née Morrison, he was born on 5 December 1857 at the family property, ‘Fordon’, Nile. O’BYRNE, JUSTIN HILARY (1912–1993) SENATOR FOR TASMANIA On 20 June 1940 O’Byrne enlisted in the RAAF at Hobart. In November, he embarked for training in Ottawa, Canada. Commissioned as a pilot officer, O’Byrne travelled to Kirton-in-Lindsey in Lincolnshire, serving as a founding member of 452 Squadron, RAAF. COLSTON, MALCOLM ARTHUR (1938–2003)SENATOR FOR QUEENSLAND Malcolm Arthur Colston was born in Brisbane on 5 April 1938, the eldest child of Douglas Thomas Colston, a carpenter, and his wife Myrtle Clorine Ruby, née THE OPENING, 9 MAY 1901 Opening of Federal Parliament, Exhibition Building, Melbourne, 9 May 1901. The first Commonwealth parliamentarians are shown assembled on a low platform before the Duke of York and the Governor-General, in the Melbourne Exhibition Building. Prime Minister Edmund Barton stands centre front, flanked by members of the Ministry. THE BIOGRAPHICAL DICTIONARY OF THE AUSTRALIAN SENATE Harry Evans, 2000. This web site presents biographies of Australian senators and clerks of the Senate who completed their service in the Senate between 1901 to 2002. The Biographical Dictionary of the Australian Senate was verified, edited and compiled in the Biographical Dictionary Unit of the Research Section of the AustralianSenate.
THE BIOGRAPHICAL DICTIONARY OF THE AUSTRALIAN SENATE NASH, Richard Harry (1890–1951)Senator for Western Australia, 1943–51 (Australan Labor Party) Richard Harry Nash was born on 2 July 1890 in Ascot Vale, Victoria, to Harry Avers Nash, a storeman, and Elizabeth Phoebe, née Stroud, who had emigrated from England. In 1897 Dick, as he was known, and his parents arrived in Kalgoorlie. TANGNEY, DAME DOROTHY MARGARET (1907–1985) SENATOR FOR In 1943 Dorothy Margaret Tangney became the first woman senator and the first Labor woman in either house of the federal Parliament. Tangney was born in North Perth, Western Australia, on 13 March 1907, though either through misinformation or artifice she provided 1911 as the year of her birth. She was the third of seven surviving children of Irish-born Eugene Tangney, timber mill worker and MATHESON, SIR ALEXANDER PERCEVAL (1861–1929)SENATOR FOR Alexander Matheson, merchant and developer, was born in Mayfair, London, on 6 February 1861, the eldest son of Sir Alexander Matheson, a Member of Parliament who was created a Baronet in 1882, and his third wife, Eleanor, née Perceval. MCLEAN, PAUL ALEXANDER (1937– )SENATOR FOR NEW SOUTH WALES ‘Although I was not raised in poverty, I saw enough of it to understand it’ admitted Paul Alexander McLean. Born to Harold Penrose McLean and Kathleen McLean, née Collins, on 13 March 1937 in the Lake Macquarie suburb of Belmont in the Hunter region of NSW, he was raised by parents—’a coal miner and the daughter of a tin miner’—who instilled in their son a belief in the QUIRKE, JOHN ANDREW (1950– )SENATOR FOR SOUTH AUSTRALIA QUIRKE, John Andrew (1950– ) Senator for South Australia, 1997–2000 (Australian Labor Party) MULLAN, JOHN (1871–1941)SENATOR FOR QUEENSLAND, 1913–17 John Mullan, ‘a small, pugnacious figure, with a Paderewski-like mop of curly black hair’, impressed his contemporaries as ‘a fluent and somewhat combative debater, with a sprightly Irish wit . . . as nimble and elusive in the dialectical wrestling bouts of the debating floor as the fabled leprechaun of Irish folk-lore’. Mullan was born in Loughlinstown, near Dublin, Ireland, on 8 LATHAM, SIR CHARLES GEORGE (1882–1968) SENATOR FOR WESTERN Charles George Latham, wheat farmer and influential Country Party politician, believed in firm action. During the Depression of the 1930s he once suggested to Premier James Mitchell that a fire hose be turned upon a large crowd demonstrating outside the Treasury Building in St George’s Terrace, though Mitchell, it seems, did not take hisadvice.
BUTTFIELD, DAME NANCY EILEEN (1912–2005) SENATOR FOR SOUTH Nancy Eileen Buttfield, the first South Australian woman to enter state or federal parliament, and a community worker and public figure in Adelaide, was born on 12 November 1912 in Kensington Gardens, Adelaide, to Edward Wheewall (later Sir Edward) Holden and Hilda May,née Lavis.
KENDALL, ROY (1899–1972) SENATOR FOR QUEENSLAND, 1950–65 This biography was first published in The Biographical Dictionary of the Australian Senate, vol. 3, 1962-1983, University of New South Wales Press Ltd, Sydney, 2010, pp. 286-291. THE BIOGRAPHICAL DICTIONARY OF THE AUSTRALIAN SENATE Harry Evans, 2000. This web site presents biographies of Australian senators and clerks of the Senate who completed their service in the Senate between 1901 to 2002. The Biographical Dictionary of the Australian Senate was verified, edited and compiled in the Biographical Dictionary Unit of the Research Section of the AustralianSenate.
THE BIOGRAPHICAL DICTIONARY OF THE AUSTRALIAN SENATE NASH, Richard Harry (1890–1951)Senator for Western Australia, 1943–51 (Australan Labor Party) Richard Harry Nash was born on 2 July 1890 in Ascot Vale, Victoria, to Harry Avers Nash, a storeman, and Elizabeth Phoebe, née Stroud, who had emigrated from England. In 1897 Dick, as he was known, and his parents arrived in Kalgoorlie. TANGNEY, DAME DOROTHY MARGARET (1907–1985) SENATOR FOR In 1943 Dorothy Margaret Tangney became the first woman senator and the first Labor woman in either house of the federal Parliament. Tangney was born in North Perth, Western Australia, on 13 March 1907, though either through misinformation or artifice she provided 1911 as the year of her birth. She was the third of seven surviving children of Irish-born Eugene Tangney, timber mill worker and MATHESON, SIR ALEXANDER PERCEVAL (1861–1929)SENATOR FOR Alexander Matheson, merchant and developer, was born in Mayfair, London, on 6 February 1861, the eldest son of Sir Alexander Matheson, a Member of Parliament who was created a Baronet in 1882, and his third wife, Eleanor, née Perceval. MCLEAN, PAUL ALEXANDER (1937– )SENATOR FOR NEW SOUTH WALES ‘Although I was not raised in poverty, I saw enough of it to understand it’ admitted Paul Alexander McLean. Born to Harold Penrose McLean and Kathleen McLean, née Collins, on 13 March 1937 in the Lake Macquarie suburb of Belmont in the Hunter region of NSW, he was raised by parents—’a coal miner and the daughter of a tin miner’—who instilled in their son a belief in the QUIRKE, JOHN ANDREW (1950– )SENATOR FOR SOUTH AUSTRALIA QUIRKE, John Andrew (1950– ) Senator for South Australia, 1997–2000 (Australian Labor Party) MULLAN, JOHN (1871–1941)SENATOR FOR QUEENSLAND, 1913–17 John Mullan, ‘a small, pugnacious figure, with a Paderewski-like mop of curly black hair’, impressed his contemporaries as ‘a fluent and somewhat combative debater, with a sprightly Irish wit . . . as nimble and elusive in the dialectical wrestling bouts of the debating floor as the fabled leprechaun of Irish folk-lore’. Mullan was born in Loughlinstown, near Dublin, Ireland, on 8 LATHAM, SIR CHARLES GEORGE (1882–1968) SENATOR FOR WESTERN Charles George Latham, wheat farmer and influential Country Party politician, believed in firm action. During the Depression of the 1930s he once suggested to Premier James Mitchell that a fire hose be turned upon a large crowd demonstrating outside the Treasury Building in St George’s Terrace, though Mitchell, it seems, did not take hisadvice.
BUTTFIELD, DAME NANCY EILEEN (1912–2005) SENATOR FOR SOUTH Nancy Eileen Buttfield, the first South Australian woman to enter state or federal parliament, and a community worker and public figure in Adelaide, was born on 12 November 1912 in Kensington Gardens, Adelaide, to Edward Wheewall (later Sir Edward) Holden and Hilda May,née Lavis.
KENDALL, ROY (1899–1972) SENATOR FOR QUEENSLAND, 1950–65 This biography was first published in The Biographical Dictionary of the Australian Senate, vol. 3, 1962-1983, University of New South Wales Press Ltd, Sydney, 2010, pp. 286-291. MATHESON, SIR ALEXANDER PERCEVAL (1861–1929)SENATOR FOR Alexander Matheson, merchant and developer, was born in Mayfair, London, on 6 February 1861, the eldest son of Sir Alexander Matheson, a Member of Parliament who was created a Baronet in 1882, and his third wife, Eleanor, née Perceval. REYNOLDS, MARGARET (1941– )SENATOR FOR QUEENSLAND, 1982–99 Margaret Reynolds, activist, educator and author, was born Margaret Lyne, in Hobart on 19 July 1941, the only child of Walter Rodis (Rod) Lyne and his wife Jess, née Montgomery, a teacher. BUTTFIELD, DAME NANCY EILEEN (1912–2005) SENATOR FOR SOUTH Nancy Eileen Buttfield, the first South Australian woman to enter state or federal parliament, and a community worker and public figure in Adelaide, was born on 12 November 1912 in Kensington Gardens, Adelaide, to Edward Wheewall (later Sir Edward) Holden and Hilda May,née Lavis.
CRANE, ARTHUR WINSTON (1941– )SENATOR FOR WESTERN Arthur Winston Crane (known as Winston) was born in Perth on 21 August 1941, one of seven children of farmer Arthur Crane and his wife Lavina, née Longman, from Bindi Bindi in the wheat belt north ofPerth.
ELLIOTT, HAROLD EDWARD (1878–1931) SENATOR FOR VICTORIA Harold Edward Elliott, was born at West Charlton in north-west Victoria on 19 June 1878. He was the fifth of eight children of Thomas Elliott and his wife Helen, née Janverin, who had arrived in Victoria during the gold rushes of the 1850s. NEGUS, SYDNEY AMBROSE (1912–1986) SENATOR FOR WESTERN This biography was first published in The Biographical Dictionary of the Australian Senate, vol. 3, 1962-1983, University of New South Wales Press Ltd, Sydney, 2010, pp. 526-531. CAMERON, CYRIL ST CLAIR (1857–1941)SENATOR FOR TASMANIA Cyril St Clair Cameron, army officer and farmer, came from a northern Tasmanian family which produced four parliamentarians. Son of Donald Cameron, MLC, and Mary, née Morrison, he was born on 5 December 1857 at the family property, ‘Fordon’, Nile. O’BYRNE, JUSTIN HILARY (1912–1993) SENATOR FOR TASMANIA On 20 June 1940 O’Byrne enlisted in the RAAF at Hobart. In November, he embarked for training in Ottawa, Canada. Commissioned as a pilot officer, O’Byrne travelled to Kirton-in-Lindsey in Lincolnshire, serving as a founding member of 452 Squadron, RAAF. COLSTON, MALCOLM ARTHUR (1938–2003)SENATOR FOR QUEENSLAND Malcolm Arthur Colston was born in Brisbane on 5 April 1938, the eldest child of Douglas Thomas Colston, a carpenter, and his wife Myrtle Clorine Ruby, née THE OPENING, 9 MAY 1901 Opening of Federal Parliament, Exhibition Building, Melbourne, 9 May 1901. The first Commonwealth parliamentarians are shown assembled on a low platform before the Duke of York and the Governor-General, in the Melbourne Exhibition Building. Prime Minister Edmund Barton stands centre front, flanked by members of the Ministry. * Skip to navigation* Skip to content
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