Frederick Lye

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Frederick Arthur Lye (1881 – 3 October 1949) was a New Zealand politician of the Liberal Party then of the United Party. The United Party was a continuation of the historical Liberal Party, albeit more conservative.

Preceded byAlexander Young
Succeeded byStewart Reid
Preceded byStewart Reid
Succeeded byRobert Coulter
Quick facts Member of the New Zealand Parliament for Waikato, Preceded by ...
Frederick Lye
Member of the New Zealand Parliament
for Waikato
In office
7 December 1922  4 November 1925
Preceded byAlexander Young
Succeeded byStewart Reid
In office
14 November 1928  27 November 1935
Preceded byStewart Reid
Succeeded byRobert Coulter
Personal details
Born1881
Died (aged 67)
Hamilton, New Zealand
PartyLiberal (1922–28)
United (1928–36)
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Early life and family

Born in Tunbridge Wells, Kent, England, Lye was the son of Robert Bevan Lye. The family moved to New Zealand in 1886, arriving in Auckland, where Lye was educated. He left home when he was 19 years old and found work milking cows on a dairy farm near Pukekohe. About five years later, he took up farming on his own account at Otakeho on Taranaki's Waimate Plains. In 1906, Lye married Charlotte Louie Preece from Kaponga, and the couple went on to have 10 children. They remained farming at Otakeho until 1918, when they moved to Pukekura, just south of Cambridge in the Waikato, while retaining their farming interests in Taranaki.[1]

His younger brother, Samuel Charles Gale Lye (1884–1937),[2] was also a dairy farmer[3][4] and also stood for the Liberals in several elections.[5]

Political career

Later life and death

Lye remained living at Pukekura until his death at Waikato Hospital in Hamilton on 3 October 1949. He was survived by his wife and 10 children, and was buried at Hautapu Cemetery.[1]

References

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