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Arthur Guinness (New Zealand politician)

New Zealand politician

Arthur Guinness (New Zealand politician)

Summary

New Zealand politician

FieldValue
honorific-prefixThe Honourable
nameSir Arthur Guinness
imageArthur Robert Guinness, 1900s.jpg
captionArthur Guinness in the 1900s
order7th Speaker of the House of Representatives
primeministerRichard Seddon
term_start1903
term_end10 June 1913
predecessorMaurice O'Rorke
successorFrederic Lang
constituency_MP2Grey (previously Greymouth)
parliament2New Zealand
term_start21884
term_end210 June 1913
successor2Paddy Webb
birth_date
birth_placeCalcutta, India
death_date
partyLiberal
otherparty
partner
blank1Father
data1Frank Guinness

|honorific-prefix = The Honourable |honorific-suffix =

Sir Arthur Robert Guinness (11 January 1846 – 10 June 1913) was a New Zealand politician, and Speaker of the House of Representatives.

Personal information

He was born in Calcutta, India, son of Frank Guinness, who arrived at Lyttelton by the ship Tory in August 1852. He was educated at Christ's College, Christchurch 1854–1859 (being no. 31 on the list). He received his legal education from Edward Harston and then from Garrick and Cowlishaw, before being admitted to the bar in 1867. He then practised as a barrister and solicitor in Greymouth, where he served on the Westland Provincial Council from 1874 to 1876, and was then a member of the Grey County Council from 1876 to 1890, including nine as its chair.

Member of Parliament

Guinness first stood for two-member Grey Valley in the 1876 election and out of the four candidates, he came last. In his second attempt in , he defeated the incumbent, Joseph Petrie, in the single-member electorate that was by now called Greymouth. He remained a member of the House of Representatives for Greymouth until 1890, and then represented the Grey electorate until his death in 1913. He belonged to the Liberal Party.

He was Chairman of Committees from 1893 to 1902, then the 7th Speaker of the House of Representatives from 1903 until his death in 1913. Upon the death of William Steward on 30 October 1912, he became Father of the House. When he died, his replacement from the Grey by-election was Paddy Webb, who was elected on the second ballot with Liberal support.

Family

Arms granted to Guinness's<br>grandfather Hosea Guinness in 1814

In 1875, Guinness married Elisabeth Westbrook, daughter of Mr James Westbrook of Launceston.

He was a great-grandson of his namesake the Dublin brewer Arthur Guinness (1725–1803).

Notes

References

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References

  1. Cyclopedia Company Limited. (1897). "The Cyclopedia of New Zealand : Wellington Provincial District". [[The Cyclopedia of New Zealand]].
  2. (1997). "The School list of Christ's College, 1850 to 1995". Christ’s College Old Boys' Association.
  3. (18 January 1876). "Grey Valley Election". Grey River Argus.
  4. (18 June 1913). "The Late Sir Arthur Guinness". Colonist.
  5. (13 June 1913). "The Late Sir A. R. Guinness". Grey River Argus.
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