Bob Watson | |
Constituency Am1: | Mulgrave |
Assembly1: | Queensland Legislative |
Term Start1: | 29 April 1950 |
Term End1: | 7 March 1953 |
Predecessor1: | New seat |
Successor1: | Charles English |
Term Start2: | 3 August 1957 |
Term End2: | 26 March 1959 |
Predecessor2: | Charles English |
Successor2: | Carlisle Wordsworth |
Birth Date: | 12 October 1896 |
Birth Place: | Durham, England |
Death Place: | Coorparoo, Queensland, Australia |
Birthname: | Robert Hodgson Watson |
Party: | Country Party |
Occupation: | Sugarcane farmer |
Robert Hodgson Watson (12 October 1896 – 26 March 1959) was an Australian politician who served as a member of the Queensland Legislative Assembly.[1]
Watson was born in Yorkshire, England, the son of William Watson and his wife Elizabeth Ann (née Forster) and came to Australia at an early age. He was educated to primary level and after he finished his schooling, he worked at the family sugarcane farm at Mourilyan before working on farms at Mossman and Edmonton. He was also an inspector and Chairman of Directors at the Babinda Central Mill.[1]
On 8 December 1920 Watson married Ethel Agnes Mutch[1] (died 1981)[2] and together had two daughters. He died in Coorparoo, Brisbane, in March 1959[1] and was cremated at the Mt Thompson Crematorium.[3]
Watson started out in politics as a councillor on the Mulgrave Shire Council and went on to be chairman of the shire for eleven years.[1]
A member of the Country Party, Watson won the seat of Mulgrave at the 1950 Queensland state election, beating Charles English of the Labor Party, W.F. Falls of the Communist Party and G.A. Groth of the North Queensland Labor Party.[4] He held the seat for three years before being defeated by Charles English in 1953.[5]
He stood at the 1956 Queensland state election but was again beaten by English, but at the state election the next year he once again won Mulgrave, beating English who by now had joined the Queensland Labor Party.[6] Watson became ill during the 1959 parliamentary sittings and died a few days later.[1] He was the executive officer of the Australian Sugar Producers' Association and executive of the District Cane Growers Association. He was also a member of Rotary and a Freemason.[1]