Norman Nock

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Preceded byArchibald Howie
Succeeded byStanley Crick
ConstituencyGipps Ward
Born(1899-04-11)11 April 1899
Sir Norman Nock
Norman Lindfield Nock (1938)
63rd Lord Mayor of Sydney
In office
1 January 1938  31 December 1939
Preceded byArchibald Howie
Succeeded byStanley Crick
Alderman of the City of Sydney
In office
3 December 1934  5 December 1941
ConstituencyGipps Ward
Personal details
Born(1899-04-11)11 April 1899
Died24 June 1990(1990-06-24) (aged 91)
Spouse(s)Ethel Evelyna Bradford
(m. 1927–1990; his death)
ChildrenGraham Nock
ParentThomas Nock

Sir Norman Lindfield Nock (11 April 1899 24 June 1990) was an Australian businessman and politician. Nock was Chairman and managing director of the family hardware retail firm, Nock & Kirby, from 1925 to 1979, and was an Alderman of the City of Sydney, rising to become Lord Mayor for two terms in 1938 and 1939.[1][2]

Norman Lindfield Nock was born on 11 April 1899 in Lindfield, New South Wales, as the youngest child of Thomas Nock and Eliza Jane Simmonds.[3] After receiving his education at Sydney Church of England Grammar School, at age 18 he joined the staff of Farmer & Company's department store in Pitt Street, Sydney. After being rejected for war service on medical grounds, Nock travelled to England in 1919 and worked at Selfridges in London, and later at John Wanamaker & Co in New York. Returning to Australia, Nock joined the family firm of Nock & Kirby, which his father had established in 1894 with Herbert Kirby, and left Australia again in 1923 to establish a branch of the company in London.[4]

Nock returned to Sydney in 1925 to take up the post of managing director of Nock & Kirby on the sudden death of his brother, Harold Thomas Nock.[5] Nock undertook an expansion of the business and in 1933 opened a prominent new main store in George Street.[6] On 22 October 1927, he married Ethel Evelyna Bradford at St Philip's Church, Sydney.[7] A member of the Retail Traders' Association of New South Wales since 1930, Nock was elected president in 1932.[8]

Political career

Later life

References

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