John Watson (Queensland politician)

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Preceded bySamuel Brooks
Succeeded byFrank McDonnell
BornJohn Watson
July 1833
Aberdeen, Scotland
Died3 July 1912 (aged 78 or 79)
John Watson
Member of the Queensland Legislative Assembly
for Fortitude Valley
In office
12 May 1888  21 March 1896
Preceded bySamuel Brooks
Succeeded byFrank McDonnell
Personal details
BornJohn Watson
July 1833
Aberdeen, Scotland
Died3 July 1912 (aged 78 or 79)
Resting placeToowong Cemetery
PartyMinisterial
Spouse(s)Eliza Davis (m.1856 d.1880), Elizabeth Mary Frances Gillies (m.1881 d.1907), Christina Marie Guymer (m.1908)
OccupationShipwright

John Watson (July 1833 – 3 July 1912) was an Australian politician who served as a member for Fortitude Valley in the Queensland Legislative Assembly.[1]

Watson was born in Aberdeen, Scotland, in July 1833, He served an apprenticeship there with Messrs. Hall Bros., ship builders. He arrived in Sydney in 1857, and came on to Brisbane in 1864 (five years after Queensland had been become a separate colony). He entered into business as a shipwright at Bulimba, but undertook the construction of many bridges. The Burdekin bridge, near Charters Towers, was one of his early contracts and he later built the Mackay embankment, the municipal wharves at Petrie Bight, the Musgrave wharf at South Brisbane, and 750 feet of the South Brisbane railway wharf.[2]

Public life

Watson became a member of the Booroodabin Divisional Board, and about 1888 was elected to the Bulimba Divisional Board, of which he was twice chairman. ln 1886, he contested the Fortitude Valley seat for the Queensland Legislative Assembly, but was defeated. He tried again in 1888 and was elected and was re-elected in 1893.[2]

Family life

Later life

References

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