Len Reid Explained

Len Reid
Constituency Mp:Holt
Parliament:Australian
Predecessor:New seat
Successor:Max Oldmeadow
Term Start:25 October 1969
Term End:2 December 1972
Constituency Am1:Dandenong
Assembly1:Victorian Legislative
Predecessor1:Ray Wiltshire
Successor1:Alan Lind
Term Start1:31 May 1958
Term End1:September 1969
Birth Date:1916 9, df=yes
Birth Place:Clifton Hill, Victoria
Death Place:Melbourne, Victoria
Nationality:Australian
Spouse:Joan Swallow
Party:Liberal Party
Children:Roger and Virginia
Occupation:Fighter pilot, dairy farmer
Profession:BP petroleum company
Allegiance:Australia
Branch:Royal Australian Air Force
Serviceyears:1940–1946
1948–1954
Rank:Flight Lieutenant
Commands:No. 79 Squadron RAAF
Battles:
Mawards:Distinguished Flying Cross

Leonard Stanley Reid, (21 September 1916 – 22 April 2003) was an Australian fighter pilot and politician who represented the Liberal Party as a member of the Victorian Legislative Assembly and the Australian House of Representatives.

Reid served as a fighter pilot in both the Royal Australian Air Force and on attachment to the Royal Air Force during the Second World War, and was awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross on 4 December 1942.[1] After the war, he ran a dairy farm in Cranbourne, Victoria before being elected to the Electoral district of Dandenong at the 1958 Victorian state election. Reid served as the member for Dandenong for 11 years,[2] before resigning his seat to contest the newly created federal Division of Holt, which covered much of the same area as Dandenong, at the 1969 federal election.[3] Reid won narrowly, but was defeated at the 1972 federal election partly due to the swing that ousted the McMahon government and partly due to demographic changes which saw Dandenong develop as a major industrial centre.

Whilst a member of the lower house he crossed the floor and voted with the Labor Party or abstained from voting.[3]

Reid was avidly connected with people who were marginalised in society and actively concentrated on the poor in India and Bangladesh. His publications included Crusade against Death.[4] He was one of the founders of the charity "For Those Who Have Less", now part of "Action Aid Australia".[5]

In 1946, Reid married Joan Averill Swallow, daughter of Leonard Swallow and Dorothy Comyn,[3] the niece of Hugh Comyn and William Leslie Comyn. Reid and his wife had two children, Virginia and Roger.[3]

Notes and References

  1. http://www.london-gazette.co.uk/issues/35809/supplements/5267/page.pdf Supplement to the London Gazette 4 December 1942
  2. 1520. Leonard Stanley Reid. 2022-08-04.
  3. http://www.caseyweeklycranbourne.com.au/news/local/news/general/cranbourne-loses-mover-and-shaker-joan-reid/2281278.aspx Casey Weekly Cranbourne loses mover and shaker
  4. http://catalogue.nla.gov.au/Record/433562 National Library of Australia
  5. http://home.vicnet.net.au/~action/pub/jun_03/june_2003_1.htm Action Aid Australia