Alexander Armstrong (Australian politician) explained

Alexander Armstrong
Office:Member of the
Term Start:23 April 1952
Term End:25 February 1969
Birth Name:Alexander Ewan Armstrong
Birth Date:15 June 1916
Birth Place:Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
Death Place:Alice Springs, Northern Territory, Australia
Spouse:Marjorie Alma Goodhew
Margaret Rose Cleary
Parents:George Armstrong
Florence Edith Ewan
Occupation:Grazier

Alexander Ewan Armstrong (15 June 1916  - 27 April 1985) was a politician, grazier and businessman in New South Wales, Australia.

Armstrong was born in Sydney to doctor George Armstrong and Florence Edith Ewan. He attended Scots College and became a grazier, working first on the family's Albury property and then at Winderadeen and Collector. On 10 February 1945, he married Marjorie Alma Goodhew and they had two daughters. He later divorced, and remarried Margaret Rose Cleary in July 1963.

A member of the Liberal Party, he was elected to the New South Wales Legislative Council in 1952. In 1956, he defected to the Country Party.[1] In 1968 the Supreme Court found that Armstrong had threatened to have a business associate killed,[2] and on 25 February 1969 the Legislative Council passed a resolution that he was guilty of conduct unworthy of a member of the council and that he be expelled.[3] [4] Armstrong unsuccessfully challenged his expulsion in the Court of Appeal.[5] [4]

He died at Alice Springs in 1985.[1]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Mr Alexander Ewan Armstrong (1916-1985) . 1752 . Yes . 3 May 2019.
  2. Barton v Armstrong, unreported Street J 19 December 1968, reproduced in Barton v Armstrong,
  3. Barton v Armstrong . pdf . 3858 . 3890 . New South Wales . Legislative Council . 25 February 1969.
  4. Book: Anne . Twomey . Anne Twomey (academic) . The Constitution of New South Wales . 2004 . Federation Press . 9781862875166 . 455–6 . 3 May 2019.
  5. Armstrong v Budd Court of Appeal (NSW).