Arthur Sexton | |
Birth Date: | 1892 |
Birth Place: | Auckland, New Zealand |
Death Place: | Auckland, New Zealand |
Resting Place: | Waikumete Cemetery, Auckland, New Zealand |
Constituency Mp: | Franklin |
Parliament: | New Zealand |
Term Start: | 1935 |
Term End: | 1938 |
Predecessor: | Jack Massey |
Successor: | Jack Massey |
Spouse: | Gladys Cecily Ann Astley |
Party: | Country Party |
Arthur Clifton Axford Sexton (1892 – 30 June 1970) was a New Zealand politician of the Country Party.
Sexton was born in Auckland in 1892. He was educated at Auckland Grammar School and later was admitted to Auckland University where he graduated with a Bachelor of Law in 1914. He then served in the army during World War I where he was twice wounded (eventually losing a leg) and rose from the rank of private to that of captain.[1]
After the war, he attended law lectures in London and following being discharged from military service in 1918, he married Gladys Cicely Annie Astley (1891-1962), the granddaughter of suffragist Annie Jane Schnackenberg. He passed his master's degree in laws with honours and also won the senior university scholarship in law for New Zealand in 1919. He then moved to Manurewa and began practising law in Auckland. For a total of 14 years he served as president, vice-president and executive member of the Auckland Returned Services Association.[1]
Sexton unsuccessfully stood for the Auckland City Council as an independent candidate in the 1921 local elections.[2] He was then elected a member of the Manurewa Town Board and for six years was chairman.
He was the Member of Parliament for from 1935 to 1938, when he was defeated by Jack Massey of the National Party.[3] [4]
Harold Rushworth, the other member of parliament for the Country Party, retired in 1938. The Country Party disappeared soon after the 1938 election.