Arthur Hughes | |
Assembly: | Victorian Legislative |
Term Start: | 9 April 1927 |
Term End: | 30 November 1929 |
Assembly1: | Victorian Legislative |
Term Start1: | 30 August 1921 |
Term End1: | 9 April 1927 |
Successor1: | Seat abolished |
Birth Date: | 25 October 1885 |
Death Place: | Ballarat, Victoria |
Allegiance: | Australia |
Serviceyears: | 1915–1917 1940–1943 |
Mawards: | Military Cross |
Arthur Hughes MC (25 October 1885 - 1 February 1968) was an Australian politician.
He was born in Broomfield to miner David Solomon Hughes and Esther Vickers. He was a schoolteacher in Ballarat, and during World War I served with the Australian Imperial Force in Egypt and France; wounded in 1916, he was invalided home and awarded the Military Cross. A Labor Party member, he was active in the campaign against military conscription. After the war, he was a soldier settler at Newlyn, and in 1921 he was elected to the Victorian Legislative Assembly as the Labor member for Grenville. He transferred to Hampden in 1927, but was defeated in 1929. In 1932, he left the Labor Party, feeling that it was insufficiently anti-communist. Hughes died in Ballarat in 1968.[1]