Skip to content
🎉 your wikipedia🥳

❤️ Fred Campbell (Australian politician) 🐙

"Frederick Alexander Campbell (17 January 1911 - 11 September 1995) was a member of the Queensland Legislative Assembly. Biography Campbell was born in Brisbane, Queensland, the son of Matthew Hale Campbell and his wife Annie Jessie (née Jullyan). He was educated in Brisbane and worked in the family poultry business after he left school. He later was an insurance officer specializing in fire and general insurance. On the 14th May 1936 he married Ellen McConachie (died 2008)Ellen Campbell (1910 - 2008) -- Heaven Address. Retrieved 3 May 2016. and together had a son and two daughters. Campbell died in September 1995 and was cremated at Albany Creek Crematorium.Frederick Alexander Campbell ( - 1995) -- Heaven Address. Retrieved 3 May 2016. Public career Campbell, for the Liberal Party, won the new seat of Aspley at the 1960 Queensland state election. He represented the seat for twenty years before retiring at the 1980 state election Nicknamed affectionately as "Chooky" by the then Labor opposition, Campbell held several ministerial portfolios whilst in politics including: * Minister for Labour Relations 1977-1980 * Minister for Industrial Development 1967-1972 * Minister for Development and Industrial Affairs 1972-1974 * Minister for Industrial Development, Labour Relations and Consumer Affairs 1974-1977 * Minister for Transport 1977 * Deputy Leader of the Parliamentary Liberal Party 1976 References External links * Australian Dictionary of Biography Category:Members of the Queensland Legislative Assembly Category:1911 births Category:1995 deaths Category:Liberal Party of Australia members of the Parliament of Queensland Category:People educated at Brisbane State High School Category:20th-century Australian politicians "

❤️ Shila Amzah discography 🐙

""

❤️ French ship Dalmate (1808) 🐙

"Dalmate was a 74-gun ship of the line of the French Navy. Career Ordered on 11 August 1806, Dalmate was one of the ships built in the various shipyards captured by the First French Empire in Holland and Italy in a crash programme to replenish the ranks of the French Navy. She was commissioned in 1808 and served under Captain Le Jaulne.Quintin, p.226 She was decommissioned in 1813, and her crew transferred on Friedland. At the Bourbon Restoration, she was renamed Hector, changed to Dalmate during the Hundred Days, and to Hector back again after Napoléon's second abdication. She later served under Captain Baron Lemarant between 15 May to 22 June 1817,Quintin, p.230 and Bergeret from 13 September, cruising the Caribbean and returning to Rochefort on 4 February 1818.Quintin, p.59 Notes, citations, and references =Notes= =Citations= =References= * * Category:Ships of the line of the French Navy Category:Téméraire-class ships of the line Category:1808 ships "

Released under the MIT License.

has loaded