Philip Salmon

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Philip Melville Salmon (16 November 1849 – 7 July 1909) was an Australian politician. He was a member of the Victorian Legislative Assembly from 1892 to 1894, representing the electorate of Port Melbourne.

Salmon was born in England. His family migrated to Victoria around 1861 and settled in Bendigo for several years before relocating to Port Melbourne. He worked at the sugar works, then worked as an auctioneer for a firm in Bay Street. He later moved to Footscray, where he was an auctioneer and real estate agent and proprietor of The Footscray Advertiser newspaper.[1][2][3]

Salmon was a prominent member of both the Port Melbourne and Footscray communities, serving in a range of community organisations, including being a member of the Sandridge School Board of Advice, president of the Footscray United Cricket Club and Alberts Football Club and vice-president of the Footscray Rowing Club.[4][5][6][7] He was a lieutenant in the Sandridge Artillery Corps and then Williamstown Artillery Corps of the Victorian Volunteer Forces and a captain in the Victorian Militia, but resigned his commission in 1884.[8][9][10][11][12] He was the inaugural president of the Victorian Fellmongers' Union in 1884.[13] He was an unsuccessful candidate for Footscray at the 1886 election.[14]

In 1888, Salmon moved back to Port Melbourne and acquired Port Melbourne newspaper The Standard. He was Mayor of the Town of Port Melbourne in 1890–91.[8]

Term in parliament

Life post-politics and death

References

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