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Fred Bamford

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Preceded by
  
New seat

Name
  
Fred Bamford

Nationality
  
Australian

Party
  
National Labor Party


Spouse(s)
  
Mary Ann Miller

Succeeded by
  
Lewis Nott

Occupation
  
Cabinet maker

Resigned
  
October 3, 1925

Fred Bamford

Born
  
11 February 1849 Dubbo, New South Wales (
1849-02-11
)

Political party
  
Labor (1901–17) Nationalist (1917–25)

Role
  
Former Member of the Australian Parliament

Died
  
September 10, 1934, Sydney, Australia

Previous office
  
Member of the Australian Parliament (1901–1925)

Frederick William "Fred" Bamford (11 February 1849 – 10 September 1934) was an Australian politician.

Bamford was born in Dubbo, New South Wales and educated at Toowoomba, Queensland. He left school at 14 and worked as a carpenter around the Toowoomba area. In September 1871 he married Mary Ann Miller. He and a partner set up a cabinet-making business in Mackay in 1882 but he went bankrupt in 1884.

Political career

In 1892 Bamford became a publican in Bowen and ran unsuccessfully for the seat of Bowen in the Legislative Assembly of Queensland in December 1895 and March 1899. He was elected to the Bowen municipal council in 1897 and was elected mayor in 1898.

Bamford narrowly won the Australian House of Representatives seat of Herbert at the 1901 election as the Australian Labor Party candidate, campaigning specifically against the employment of Kanakas in the North Queensland sugar cane fields. In parliament, he spoke frequently in support of the White Australia policy and subsidies and protection for the sugar industry. From 1902 to 1916, he was vice-president of the Waterside Workers' Federation while Billy Hughes was its president. In July 1915, he became the first member to speak in favour of the introduction of conscription during World War I. He was expelled from the Labor Party on 30 October 1916 and was Minister for Home and Territories in Hughes' National Labor Party ministry from 14 November to 17 February 1917. He retired from parliament at the 1925 election.

Bamford moved to Sydney, where he died in 1934, survived by three sons and two daughters.

References

Fred Bamford Wikipedia


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