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James McColl (Australian politician)

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Preceded by
  
New seat

Occupation
  
Insurance agent

Spouse
  
Emily Boyle

Succeeded by
  
Albert Palmer

Religion
  
Presbyterian

Parents
  
Hugh McColl

Nationality
  
English Australian

Name
  
James McColl

Relations
  
Hugh McColl (father)

Role
  
Former Australian Senator


James McColl (Australian politician)

Born
  
31 January 1844 South Shields, England (
1844-01-31
)

Died
  
February 20, 1929, Melbourne, Australia

Political party
  
Protectionist Party, Free Trade Party, Commonwealth Liberal Party

Previous offices
  
Australian Senator (1907–1914)

Education
  
Scotch College, Melbourne

James Hiers McColl (31 January 1844 – 20 February 1929) was an Australian politician.

McColl was born in South Shields, Tyne and Wear, England, the son of Hugh McColl, and migrated with his family to Australia in 1853, but his mother died before they landed in Melbourne. McColl was educated at the Model School, Sandhurst and for a time at Scotch College, Melbourne. He married Emily Boyle in January 1867 and subsequently became an insurance agent and legal manager.

Political career

McColl supported irrigation and closer settlement and won the seat of Mandurang in the Victorian Legislative Assembly in 1886, moving to the seat of Gunbower in 1889. He was Minister of Mines and of Water Supply from January 1893 to September 1894 and President of the Board of Land and Works, Commissioner Crown Lands and Survey and Minister Forests from December 1899 to November 1900. As minister, he was responsible for the first purchase of large estates so that they could be sub-divided for closer settlement.

McColl was a strong supporter of Australian federation and won the House of Representatives seat of Echuca at the first federal election, in 1901 as a Protectionist. At the 1906 election, he moved to the Senate, his term commencing on 1 January 1907. He was the first person to have served in both houses of the federal parliament.

He was appointed Vice-President of the Executive Council in the Cook Ministry from June 1913 to September 1914. He was defeated at the 1914 election.

McColl bought an irrigation farm at Gunbower (near Cohuna), but later retired to the Melbourne suburb of Deepdene. His first wife had died in 1898 and he remarried Sarah Ann Thomas in January 1900. He died in Melbourne, survived by his wife and their two sons and a daughter and two daughters from his first marriage.

References

James McColl (Australian politician) Wikipedia


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