James Thomas Hogan
James Thomas Hogan (1 December 1874 – 1 January 1953) was an Independent Member of Parliament for two electorates in the North Island of New Zealand.
Born in Wanganui, Hogan was a machinist in the railway workshops, and a trade union secretary.[1]
Member of Parliament
New Zealand Parliament | ||||
Years | Term | Electorate | Party | |
1905–1908 | 16th | Wanganui | Liberal–Labour | |
1908–1911 | 17th | Wanganui | Liberal–Labour | |
1928–1931 | 23rd | Rangitikei | Independent |
Hogan represented the Wanganui electorate in the House of Representatives for six years from 1905 to 1911 as an Independent Liberal–Labour member.[2] Later, he returned to Parliament as an MP for Rangitikei between 1928 and 1931.[3]
In 1935, he was awarded the King George V Silver Jubilee Medal.[4]
gollark: This is very troubling. Even in release mode, the nim markdown parser is about a thousand times slower than the rust one.
gollark: I wonder if anyone tried making some cool lisp-styled assembler so you could have more unified macros.
gollark: Frankly, I'm tempted to just make minoteaur support regularized HTML or some BBCode derivative.
gollark: Link to this?
gollark: Markdown cheatsheets are also not usable as a Markdown spec. Markdown does not actually *have* a spec, so we have a wild west of incompatible implementations. Some try to mimic the original perl script, some just do approximately the right thing in most cases, some do the easy thing in case of weirdness, some follow one of many subtly incompatible formal specs.
References
- Hamer 1988, p. 363.
- Hamer 1988, p. 250.
- Wood, G. Antony (ed.) (1996), Ministers and Members in the New Zealand Parliament, Dunedin, [N.Z.]: University of Otago Press, ISBN 1-877133-00-0CS1 maint: extra text: authors list (link) p.93; and Bassett, Michael (1982), Three Party Politics in New Zealand, 1911-1931, n.p.: Historical Publications, p. 67, ISBN 0-86870-006-1
- "Official jubilee medals". Evening Post. CXIX (105). 6 May 1935. p. 4. Retrieved 12 April 2014.
Further reading
- Hamer, David A. (1988). The New Zealand Liberals: The Years of Power, 1891–1912. Christchurch: Auckland University Press. ISBN 1-86940-014-3.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
- Bassett, Michael (1982), Three Party Politics in New Zealand, 1911-1931, n.p.: Historical Publications, ISBN 0-86870-006-1
- Wilson, James Oakley (1985) [First published in 1913]. New Zealand Parliamentary Record, 1840–1984 (4th ed.). Wellington: V.R. Ward, Govt. Printer. OCLC 154283103.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
- Wood, G. Anthony, ed. (1996). Ministers and Members: In the New Zealand Parliament. Dunedin: Otago University Press.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
New Zealand Parliament | ||
---|---|---|
Preceded by Archibald Willis |
Member of Parliament for Wanganui 1905–11 |
Succeeded by Bill Veitch |
Preceded by William Spiers Glenn |
Member of Parliament for Rangitikei 1928–31 |
Succeeded by Alexander Stuart |
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.