• Thumbnail for James McGowen
    James Sinclair Taylor McGowen (16 August 1855 – 7 April 1922) was an Australian politician. He served as premier of New South Wales from 1910 to 1913...
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  • alternatively spelled McGowen or Gowen include: Franklin B. Gowen (1836–1889), attorney, president of Reading Railroad James McGowen (1855–1922), Premier...
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  • Thumbnail for William McKell
    1917 state election defeated James McGowen, a former Labor premier who had been expelled from the party. In 1920, aged 29, McKell was Minister of Justice...
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  • James Sinclair Taylor McGowen (25 October 1905 – 9 November 1994) was an Australian politician. He was a Liberal Party of Australia member of the Tasmanian...
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  • James Greer McGowen (September 19, 1870 – December 26, 1940) was a justice of the Supreme Court of Mississippi from 1925 until his death in 1940. James...
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  • Thumbnail for Chris Minns
    leader wants to be the next Keating". The Sydney Morning Herald. O'Doherty, James (15 July 2021). "Chris Minns will move into his electorate after selling...
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  • Leaders Joseph Cook James McGowen William Holman Ernest Durack John Storey James Dooley Greg McGirr Bill Dunn Jack Lang William McKell Jim McGirr Joseph Cahill...
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  • Thumbnail for William Holman
    Wales in the state's first Labor government, under Premier James McGowen. He succeeded McGowen as premier in June 1913, and later that year led his party...
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  • AWU sided with the ALP. Tensions continued to rise during McGowen's premiership, as McGowen and Holman refused to support the holding of the 1911 trade...
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  • Queensland in 1899, and the first majority Labor government was led by James McGowen in New South Wales in 1910. Since about 1910 state politics have followed...
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  • Britannica. Retrieved March 7, 2007, from Encyclopædia Britannica Online. James Copnall (2004-10-14). "Mavuba: born without a nation". BBC Sport. Retrieved...
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  • Thumbnail for McGowen ministry
    The McGowen ministry was the 34th ministry of the New South Wales Government, and was led by the 18th Premier, James McGowen. This ministry marks the first...
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  • Thumbnail for Zach Gowen
    Zachary Mark Gowen (born March 30, 1983) is an American professional wrestler and promoter. Gowen competed for World Wrestling Entertainment and Total...
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  • Thumbnail for McGowan
    screenwriter, and director James McGowen (1855–1922), Premier of New South Wales 1910–1913 Jewel McGowan (1921–1962), American dancer Joe McGowan (born 1944),...
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  • Thumbnail for Premier of New South Wales
    Gowrie (from 1935) 18 James McGowen MLA for Redfern (1855–1922) 1910 21 October 1910 29 June 1913 2 years, 251 days Labor McGowen 19 William Holman MLA...
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  • Thumbnail for Kristina Keneally
    Bennelong byelection". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 14 November 2017. James Massola (17 December 2017). "Bennelong byelection: John Alexander wins battle...
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  • Thumbnail for Linda Burney
    Inquiry into Child Protection Services by retired Supreme Court Justice James Wood in November 2008. She was the lead minister in a whole of government...
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  • 1857) 1920 – Karl Binding, German lawyer and jurist (b. 1841) 1922 – James McGowen, Australian politician, 18th Premier of New South Wales (b. 1855) 1928...
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  • Thumbnail for Neville Wran
    the testimony of other involved officers and former licensing magistrate James Swanson, stated on camera their belief that Saffron ordered the crime, which...
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  • Thumbnail for Prue Car
    Jihad Dib as Shadow Minister for Education in the Shadow Ministry of Jodi McKay. On 8 June 2021, Car was elected as deputy leader of the party and deputy...
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  • Thumbnail for Moon Hooch
    Moon Hooch (redirect from Wenzl McGowen)
    saxophonists Wenzl McGowen and Michael Wilbur, and drummer Jules Jenssen. The two woodwind players, along with original drummer James Muschler, met while...
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  • Thumbnail for Langism
    Leaders Joseph Cook James McGowen William Holman Ernest Durack John Storey James Dooley Greg McGirr Bill Dunn Jack Lang William McKell Jim McGirr Joseph Cahill...
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  • Thumbnail for Joseph Cook
    Post. Although there is a seat called Cook, this was named after Captain James Cook. In 2006, the Australian Electoral Commission's Redistribution Committee...
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  • Harrison (Cranford mayor) – April 1875 – 1876 Charles Leo Abry – 1877 James McGowen (mayor) – 1878 William Wood (mayor) – 1879 Alexander Purves (mayor)...
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  • Thumbnail for Bob Carr
    less than around $60,000 was criticised by New South Wales Chief Justice James Spigelman and others. Spigelman argued that it effectively "eliminates small...
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  • Thumbnail for Chris Watson
    significant swing against the incumbent government, Watson and Labour leader James McGowen decided to allow the incumbent government to remain so that it could...
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  • Thumbnail for Joseph Cahill
    Premier 21 votes to 20 against Attorney-General Clarence Martin. When James McGirr announced his resignation as premier on the grounds of ill health on...
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  • Marshall Thornley 1955 67 Dorothy Edwards 1956–1957 68 James McGowen 1958–1959 69 Frederick James Clark White 1960–1961 70 William Fry 1962–1963 71 Reg...
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  • Thumbnail for Jack Lang (Australian politician)
    Liverpool Streets). He was the third son (and sixth of ten children) of James Henry Lang, a watchmaker born in Edinburgh, Scotland, and Mary Whelan, a...
    42 KB (4,043 words) - 17:38, 20 May 2024
  • Thumbnail for Frederic Thesiger, 1st Viscount Chelmsford
    thereby leaving McGowen's government in a minority in the assembly. Holman, who had stepped in as acting-Premier following McGowen also taking leave...
    27 KB (2,564 words) - 09:40, 30 April 2024