Thomas Bouchard (politician)

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Preceded byAlec Lamont
Succeeded byPeter Airey
Preceded byJohn Huxham
Succeeded byEdgar Free
Thomas Bouchard
Member of the Queensland Legislative Assembly
for Brisbane South
In office
27 August 1904  5 February 1908
Preceded byAlec Lamont
Succeeded byPeter Airey
In office
2 October 1909  22 May 1915
Preceded byJohn Huxham
Succeeded byEdgar Free
Personal details
BornThomas William Bouchard
(1865-10-08)8 October 1865
Brisbane, Queensland, Australia
Died2 November 1943(1943-11-02) (aged 78)
Brisbane, Queensland, Australia
PartyMinisterialist
SpouseJessie Margaret Hill (m.1891 d.1937)
OccupationSolicitor

Thomas William Bouchard (8 October 1865 – 2 November 1943) was a solicitor and a member of the Queensland Legislative Assembly.[1]

Bouchard was born in Brisbane, Queensland,[1] to parents Josiah Bouchard and his wife Eliza Ann (née Arrowsmith).[2] After attending South Brisbane State School and also being privately educated,[1] he became an articled clerk at age 14, working for Peter MacPherson from 1879 until 1892.[3] Admitted as a solicitor in 1892, he soon after went into partnership with F. Holland to form Bouchard & Holland, Solicitors.[3]

Political career

First entering politics as an alderman on the South Brisbane Municipal Council,[1] Bouchard entered Queensland Parliament as a Ministerialist at the 1904 state election, winning the seat of Brisbane South.[4] He held the seat for four years but was defeated in a close-run contest in 1908.[5]

The following year, the people of Queensland went to the polls for the third successive year, and Bouchard won back his seat of South Brisbane[6] and held it until he declined to stand at the 1915 state election. During his public career he was also the Commissioner for the South Brisbane Technical College and School of Arts.[1]

Sporting career

Personal life

References

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