Alfred Kidd

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Preceded bynew constituency
Succeeded byAlbert Glover
Preceded byGeorge Fowlds
Succeeded byconstituency abolished
Alfred Kidd
Member of the New Zealand Parliament
for Auckland Central
In office
6 December 1905  17 November 1908
Preceded bynew constituency
Succeeded byAlbert Glover
Member of the New Zealand Parliament
for City of Auckland
In office
25 November 1902  6 December 1905
Preceded byGeorge Fowlds
Succeeded byconstituency abolished
18th Mayor of Auckland City
In office
25 July 1901  13 May 1903
Preceded byJohn Logan Campbell
Succeeded byEdwin Mitchelson
Personal details
Born(1849-05-20)20 May 1849
Died24 August 1917(1917-08-24) (aged 68)
PartyLiberal
Spouse(s)Christine Whisker (m.1871)
Ethel Anne Bridgeman (m.1907)

Alfred Kidd (1851 – 24 August 1917) was a New Zealand politician of the Liberal Party. He was the 18th Mayor of Auckland.

Born at Hounslow, Middlesex, England, Alfred Kidd had arrived in New Zealand in January 1866[1] on the ship Ballarat, at sixteen years old, and worked in Māngere on farms for three years. On the opening of the Thames Goldfields, he moved there and "has seen it develop from a canvas town—there being only one wooden house then (Sheehan's)—to its present proportions." He was one of the first arrivals and he began to prospect immediately. For seven years he worked in most of the principal mines and before leaving he was an amalgamator at the Kuranui Battery. He left to take the position of steward and providore for the steamers of the Waikato Steam Navigation Company. He did this for three years and married Christine Whisker. With the opening of the railways taking the passenger traffic from the river, Kidd came to Auckland and entered into the hotel keeping business. On his arrival he took over the licence of the old Provincial Hotel in Prince's Street and the Anchor Hotel. He held the license for the Commercial Hotel, (the oldest licensed house, it is claimed, in New Zealand—dating from 1841), now de Bretts, on the corner of High Street and Shortland Streets from 1882 until 1903.

Political career

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