William Tanner | |
Constituency Mp2: | Heathcote |
Parliament2: | New Zealand |
Term Start2: | 5 December 1890 |
Term End2: | 20 December 1893 |
Predecessor2: | Frederic Jones |
Successor2: | electorate abolished |
Constituency Mp1: | Avon |
Parliament1: | New Zealand |
Term Start1: | 20 December 1893 |
Term End1: | 2 December 1908 |
Predecessor1: | Edwin Blake |
Successor1: | George Warren Russell |
Birth Date: | 1851 |
Birth Place: | Northamptonshire, England |
Party: | Liberal (1905 onward) |
Children: | Walter Tanner |
William Wilcox Tanner (1851–1938) was a New Zealand politician of the Liberal Party. In 1905 he was associated with the New Liberal Party group.
William Tanner was born in Moulton, Northamptonshire, England, in 1851. In 1877 he married a daughter of Mr. J. Browett of London. They came to New Zealand in 1879 on the Waitara. He worked as a boot maker in both England and New Zealand.[1] [2]
William Tanner represented the Christchurch seats of Heathcote from 1890 to 1893 and then Avon from 1893 to 1908, when he was defeated.[3]
Among the radical policies that Tanner approved of were-the nationalisation of land, periodic revaluation of Crown leaseholds, and the establishment of a state bank.[4]
He was a member of the Woolston Municipal Council (1893–1900), Canterbury Hospital Board (1911–14), and Secretary to the Bootmakers' Union of Christchurch. Tanner was considered to be "the first Labour candidate" to be elected to the New Zealand House of Representatives in 1890 when he was successful in the Heathcote electorate. Tanner was described by the Lyttelton Times in 1902 as: "Methodical, studious, always ready to refer to statistics, records and a terror for detail" (Lyttelton Times, 18 October 1902, p. 4). The Christchurch Press said of him: "Nice voice, speaks slowly with a precision almost painful...Hard-working, intelligent, industrious and no reason to doubt his honesty".
Tanner died in 1938. His son Walter Tanner was the second Chief Censor of Films in New Zealand.
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