John Trotter (Fijian politician)

John Trotter (died 28 July 1954) was an Australian businessman who worked for Burns Philp in Tonga and Fiji for over 30 years. He served as a member of the Legislative Council of Fiji between 1938 and 1944.

John Trotter
Nominated member of the Legislative Council
In office
1938–1944
Personal details
Died28 July 1954
Auckland, New Zealand

Biography

After graduating from Hawkesbury Agricultural College, Trotter moved to Tonga in 1913 to set up the Tonga Agricultural College.[1][2] The following year he went to France to fight in World War I, returning to Tonga in 1918 to become manager of the Haʻapai branch of Burns Philp.[1]

In 1933 Trotter moved to Levuka in Fiji, before relocating to Suva three years later, where he became general manager of Burns Philp in the territory.[1] In 1938 he was appointed to the Legislative Council to replace John Maynard Hedstrom,[3] remaining a member for six years.[1]

Trotter retired from Burns Philp in June 1953 and moved to New Zealand.[2] He died in Auckland in July 1954 at the age of 66, leaving a widow and two daughters.[1]

gollark: Indeed.
gollark: It seems like one of those things which can never actually work as long as someone cares enough to break it.
gollark: I see.
gollark: Or you could end up with a seizure or something because a buffer overflow in some random driver code caused the neural interface to crash in some weird way.
gollark: Or you might end up getting viruses overwriting your belief system or something. Fun!

References

  1. Mr John Trotter Pacific Islands Monthly, August 1954, p139
  2. Mr. and Mrs. John Trotter Pacific Islands Monthly, July 1953, p62
  3. Mr. John Trotter Pacific Islands Monthly, February 1938, p9
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