Stanley Haviland

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Stanley Haviland
4th Under Secretary for Local Government
In office
5 October 1946  21 September 1960
MinisterJoseph Cahill
Jack Renshaw
Pat Hills
Preceded byHenry Eastwood Street
Succeeded byJohn Thomas Monaghan
9th President of the Metropolitan Water Sewerage and Drainage Board
In office
23 September 1960  22 September 1965
Vice PresidentWilliam Gordon Mathieson
Edwin James Walder
Preceded byJohn Goodsell
Succeeded byEdwin James Walder
Chairman of the Sydney Opera House Executive Committee
In office
2 December 1954  14 March 1961
1st Chairman of the Sydney Opera House Trust
In office
14 March 1961  1 May 1969
Preceded byNew title
Succeeded bySir Philip Baxter
Personal details
Born(1899-04-13)13 April 1899
Died2 June 1972(1972-06-02) (aged 73)
Resting placeWoronora Memorial Park
SpouseFlorence Mary Nunn (m. 1920, d. 1971)
RelationsChris Haviland (grandnephew)
ChildrenInnes Stanley Haviland MBE (1920–1990)
ProfessionPublic servant

Stanley Haviland CBE (13 April 1899 – 2 June 1972) was a New South Wales public servant who served as Under Secretary of the Department of Local Government from 1946 to 1960, and was President of the Metropolitan Water Sewerage and Drainage Board from 1960 to 1965. He was also prominent in the development and initiation of the Sydney Opera House as Chairman of the Opera House Executive Committee and the Sydney Opera House Trust from 1954 to 1969.

Haviland married Florence Nunn at the Glen Innes Methodist Church in 1920 (now Chapel Theatre).

Stanley Haviland was born on 13 April 1899 at Kogarah in the Colony of New South Wales, the fourth son of Cecil Henry Haviland (1861–1943), clerk (later Victualling Officer for HM Australian Naval Establishments, Sydney, 1913–1923[1][2][3][4]), and Emily Hannah Shaw (1862–1937). After education at Cleveland Street Superior School, Haviland joined the New South Wales Public Service when he was appointed a junior clerk in the Department of Lands on 13 April 1915.[5]

In 1920 he was appointed a Clerk in the Returned Soldiers' Settlement Branch of the Department of Lands.[6] On 16 November 1920, Haviland was married to Florence Mary Nunn at the Methodist Church, Glen Innes, by the Rev. H. W. Woodhouse.[7] Following a honeymoon at Terrigal, the Havilands moved to the Sydney suburb of Bexley.[8] On 26 August 1921 a son, Innes Stanley Haviland, was born at their Bexley residence, 'Lindisfarne' on Glenfarne Street.[9]

Public service career

Later life and legacy

References

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