Edward Dixon | |
---|---|
Member of the Victorian Legislative Assembly for St Kilda | |
In office 1 May 1874 –1 February 1880 | |
Preceded by | James Stephen |
Succeeded by | Joseph Harris |
Member of the Victorian Legislative Assembly for Prahran | |
In office 1 April 1889 –1 September 1894 | |
Preceded by | New seat |
Succeeded by | Frederick Gray |
Personal details | |
Born | 1833 Lymington,Hampshire |
Died | 5 April 1905 Caulfield |
Political party | Unaligned |
Spouse | Jean Blackwood |
Residence(s) | Prahran,Victoria,Australia |
Occupation | Accountant |
Edward John Dixon (1833-1805) was the member of the Victorian Legislative Assembly for St Kilda from 1874 until 1880,and the member for Prahran from 1889 to 1894. [1] The Prahran Chronicle attributed his loss in 1894 to his support of the Patterson government. [2]
George Dixon was a Canadian professional boxer. After winning the bantamweight title in 1892,he became the first ever black athlete to win a world championship in any sport;he was also the first Canadian-born boxing champion. Ring Magazine founder Nat Fleischer ranked Dixon as the #1 featherweight of all-time. He was inducted into Canada's Sports Hall of Fame in 1955,the Ring Magazine Hall of Fame in 1956 and the International Boxing Hall of Fame as a first-class inductee in 1990. In 2018 he was named one of the greatest 15 athletes in Nova Scotia's history,ranking sixth.
Prahran,is an inner suburb in Melbourne,Victoria,Australia,5 km south-east of Melbourne's Central Business District,located within the City of Stonnington local government area. Prahran recorded a population of 12,203 at the 2021 census.
Sir Owen Dixon was an Australian judge and diplomat who served as the sixth Chief Justice of Australia. Many consider him to be Australia's most prominent jurist.
The 53rd United States Congress was a meeting of the legislative branch of the United States federal government,consisting of the United States Senate and the United States House of Representatives. It met in Washington,D.C.,from March 4,1893,to March 4,1895,during the first two years of Grover Cleveland's second presidency. The apportionment of seats in the House of Representatives was based on the 1890 United States census.
Sir Herbert John Thornhill Hyland,storekeeper,investor,and politician,was born in 1884 at Prahran,Melbourne,second son of George Hyland,a Victorian-born painter,and his wife Mary,née Thornhill,from Ireland.
James Dixon was a United States representative and Senator from Connecticut.
Royal Dixon was an American animal rights activist,botanist,philosopher,and a member of the Americanization movement. He was,along with Diana Belais (1858–1944),a founder of the "First Church for Animal Rights" in 1921.
Sir Albert Edward Chadwick,CMG,MSM was an Australian rules footballer in the (then) Victorian Football League (VFL).
Bell's Life in London,and Sporting Chronicle was an English weekly sporting paper published as a pink broadsheet between 1822 and 1886.
"My Babe" is a Chicago blues song and a blues standard written by Willie Dixon for Little Walter. Released in 1955 on Checker Records,a subsidiary of Chess Records,the song was the only Dixon composition ever to become a number one R&B single and it was one of the biggest hits of either of their careers.
The National Gallery of Victoria Art School,associated with the National Gallery of Victoria,was a private fine arts college founded in 1867 and was Australia's leading art school of 50 years.
The High Sheriff of Queen's County was the British Crown's judicial representative in Queen's County,Ireland,Ireland from the 16th century until 1922,when the office was abolished in the new Free State and replaced by the office of Offaly County Sheriff. The sheriff had judicial,electoral,ceremonial and administrative functions and executed High Court Writs. In 1908,an Order in Council made the Lord-Lieutenant the Sovereign's prime representative in a county and reduced the High Sheriff's precedence. However,the sheriff retained his responsibilities for the preservation of law and order in the county. The usual procedure for appointing the sheriff from 1660 onwards was that three persons were nominated at the beginning of each year from the county and the Lord Lieutenant then appointed his choice as High Sheriff for the remainder of the year. Often the other nominees were appointed as under-sheriffs. Sometimes a sheriff did not fulfil his entire term through death or other event and another sheriff was then appointed for the remainder of the year. The dates given hereunder are the dates of appointment. All addresses are in Queen's County unless stated otherwise.
Sarah Dixon was a wooden sternwheel-driven steamboat operated by the Shaver Transportation Company on the Columbia and lower Willamette rivers from 1892 to 1926. Originally Sarah Dixon was built as a mixed use passenger and freight vessel,and was considered a prestige vessel for the time.
Alfred Downward was an Australian politician.
The Prahran Telegraph was a weekly newspaper published from 1860 to 1930 in Prahran,an inner-suburb of the city of Melbourne,Australia. No copy pre-1866 is known to have survived. From 1866 until December 1888,the paper was called the Telegraph and St Kilda,Prahran and South Yarra Guardian. From January 1889 until 7 December 1902,the paper was known simply as the Prahran Telegraph. From 13 December 1902 the banner head read the Prahran Telegraph,with which is incorporated the St Kilda Advertiser and the Malvern Argus.
The Electoral district of South Bourke was an electoral district of the Legislative Assembly in then Australian colony of Victoria. It was one of the original 36 electoral districts of the Assembly. It covered an area east of Melbourne,bounded by Dandenong Creek in the south and east,Moorabbin,Prahran and Hawthorn in the west and Templestowe in the north. It was abolished in 1889.
Henry Thomas Langley was the Anglican Dean of Melbourne from 1942 to 1947.
Richard Herbert Joseph Fetherston was an Australian medical doctor and politician.
Marmaduke Dixon was an early settler in North Canterbury,New Zealand. He went to sea early in his life before he settled on the north bank of the Waimakariri River. An innovative farmer,he chaired a number of road boards and was a member of the Canterbury Provincial Council.
George Fitzsimmons was a letter server,a clerk and a Chief President of the Australian Natives' Association.