Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Robert Windsor

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Preceded by
  
Michael Brosnan

Nationality
  
Australian

Occupation
  
Businessman

Resting place
  
Toowong Cemetery

Preceded by
  
Pat Hanlon

Political party
  
Liberal Party

Succeeded by
  
Col Miller

Full Name
  
Robert Levi Windsor

Born
  
28 November 1896 Mackay, Queensland, Australia (
1896-11-28
)

Spouse(s)
  
Violet Newman (m.1920 d.1938), Hazel Gladys Gordon (m.1941 d.2000)

Died
  
8 April 1988, Brisbane, Australia

Party
  
Liberal Party of Australia

Robert Levi "Bob" Windsor (28 November 1896 – 8 April 1988) was a businessman and member of the Queensland Legislative Assembly.

Contents

Biography

Windsor was born in the Central Queensland town of Mackay to parents Levi Windsor and his wife Mary (née Dunn). He went to school in Mackay and then the Brisbane Technical College where he learnt his trade as an engineer In World War One he was a stretcher bearer in the 15th Field Ambulance 5th Division from 1915 until 1919. He was gassed in 1917 and went AWOL in London in 1919. He joined the Volunteer Defence Corps in World War Two for a year.

In 1926 he established RL Windsor & Son Pty Ltd, an engineering company now known as Fibre King and was the chairman of Condamine Oil Ltd from 1955 until 1957. His interests included tennis, swimming and motoring. Windsor was a Sunday School supervisor for 30 years and a member of the City Congregationalist Church.

On the 20th October 1920 Windsor married Violet Newman. Violet died in 1938 and on the 12th April 1941 he married Hazel Gladys Gordon. He had a total of 5 children including one boy and four girls. He died in April 1988 and was buried in the Toowong Cemetery.

Public career

Windsor, for the Liberal Party, won the seat of Fortitude Valley in the Queensland Legislative Assembly, beating the sitting member, Mick Brosnan in 1957. The seat was abolished before the 1960 state election and Windsor then contested and won the seat of Ithaca, holding it for six years until his retirement from politics.

In his time in parliament he never missed a sitting day, a record at the time. When campaigning, he would take a gramophone and a pile of records and play requests to attract and maintain a crowd. Although he was not a drinker, he used the Breakfast Creek Hotel as a meeting place during his campaign and visited it every day.

References

Robert Windsor Wikipedia