Louis Smith (Australian politician)

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Louis Lawrence Smith (15 May 1830 – 8 July 1910) was an Australian politician.

Life

He was born in London, to theatre proprietor Edward Tyrell Smith and his wife Madeline Hanette Gengoult.[1] He attended St Saviour's Grammar School and the Ecole de Medicine in Paris before entering Westminster Hospital. In 1852 he moved to Victoria as surgeon of the Oriental, and after briefly mining gold established a popular unconventional medical practice in Melbourne. In 1859 he was elected to the Victorian Legislative Assembly as the member for South Bourke, serving until 1865. He served again as the member for Richmond (1871–74, 1877–83) and Mornington (1886–94). From 1881 to 1883 he was a minister without portfolio. In 1883, following the end of his first marriage to Ellen that produced six children, he married Marion Jane Higgins at East Melbourne, with whom he had five children. Smith died in Melbourne in 1910.[2]

His daughter Louise Hanson-Dyer was a noted music publisher and arts patron, while his son was Sir Harold Gengoult Smith, the Lord Mayor of Melbourne.

References

  1. ^ Featherstone, Guy. "Smith, Louis Lawrence (1830–1910)". Australian Dictionary of Biography. Melbourne University Press. ISSN 1833-7538. Retrieved 6 December 2021 – via National Centre of Biography, Australian National University.
  2. ^ "Smith, Louis Lawrence". Parliament of Victoria. 1985. Retrieved 15 October 2011.