Bill Knott (politician) explained

Bill Knott
Assembly:New South Wales Legislative
Term Start:19 September 1981
Term End:31 December 1986
Predecessor:District created
Assembly1:New South Wales Legislative
Term Start1:7 October 1978
Term End1:28 August 1981
Successor1:District abolished
Birth Name:William Edwin Knott
Birth Date:1921 2, df=yes
Death Place:Port Macquarie, New South Wales
Nationality:Australian
Spouse:Marie Griffin
Occupation:Electrician

William Edwin Knott (16 February 1921  - 19 April 2013) was an Australian politician, elected as a member of the New South Wales Legislative Assembly.

He was born in Sydney, New South Wales and educated at St Mary's College, Sydney and Christian Brothers College, Strathfield and Ultimo Technical College. He was apprenticed to the New South Wales Government Railways as an electrician. He worked for five years as an interstate transport contractor.

In October 1949 he married Marie and they had three children, Judith, Michael and Peter. Peter Knott would go on to become a Labor member of the federal House of Representatives from 1993 to 1996.

He was a member of Electrical Trades Union of Australia for 42 years. He was an alderman of Condobolin Shire (now part of Lachlan Shire) and on the board of the Mid-Lachlan County Council[1] from 1952 to 1961. He spent three years on the Kiama Council and the Illawarra County Council[1] from 1976 to 1979. He assisted in the establishment of the Mission Council Housing Scheme and low interest aboriginal housing loans. He was an honorary member of the Yuin people of Wallaga Lake Aborigines and claimed to have been awarded a burial site at Wallaga Lake by tribal elders.

He joined the Labor Party on 1953, having previously been a member of the Communist Party of Australia. He was elected as the member for the former Electoral district of Wollondilly from 1978 to 1981 and the member for Kiama from 1981 to 1986. He retired on medical advice to limit his participation in political and aboriginal activities.

On 19 April 2013 he died at Port Macquarie hospital.[2]

References

  1. Under the New South Wales Local Government Act 1919, county councils were bodies established by groups of local government areas to jointly provide facilities and services the Act empowered them to provide - utilities, weed control, flood mitigation, airports, town planning etc. This included electricity generation and distribution. The electricity generating and distributing county councils were reorganised in the 1980s then privatised in the 1990s.
  2. William Edwin Knott . 1799 . Yes . 13 May 2019.

|-