• Thumbnail for Alfred Deakin
    Alfred Deakin (3 August 1856 – 7 October 1919) was an Australian politician, statesman and barrister who served as the second prime minister of Australia...
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  • Thumbnail for Deakin University
    Deakin University is a public university in Victoria, Australia. Founded in 1974, the university was named after Alfred Deakin, the second Prime Minister...
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  • Collective Evans Deakin & Company, Australian shipbuilders Alfred Deakin High School in the suburb Deakin, Canberra, Australia. Deakins Deacon Deacon (disambiguation)...
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  • Thumbnail for Isaac Isaacs
    Protectionist Party. He became Attorney-General of Australia in 1905, under Alfred Deakin, but the following year left politics in order to become a justice of...
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  • Alfred Deakin Brookes (11 April 1920 – 19 June 2005) was the first head of the Australian Secret Intelligence Service, the intelligence agency of the...
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  • Alfred Deakin High School is a government secondary school in Deakin, Australian Capital Territory, covering years 7 to 10 in the Territory's education...
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  • Thumbnail for Edmund Barton
    which his government had created. He was succeeded as prime minister by Alfred Deakin. On the court, Barton was able to shape the judicial interpretation...
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  • Thumbnail for Third Deakin ministry
    Third Deakin ministry (Liberal) was the 7th ministry of the Government of Australia. It was led by the country's 2nd Prime Minister, Alfred Deakin. The...
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  • Thumbnail for List of prime ministers of Australia
    their party. Three former prime ministers lost a majority in the House (Alfred Deakin on two occasions, George Reid and Andrew Fisher), six resigned following...
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  • Thumbnail for Division of Deakin
    named in honour of Alfred Deakin, who served as Prime Minister of Australia on three non-consecutive occasions from 1903 to 1910. Deakin had represented...
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  • Thumbnail for Andrew Fisher
    minority government of Protectionist leader Alfred Deakin, but in November 1908 the ALP withdrew its support and Deakin resigned as prime minister. Fisher subsequently...
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  • Thumbnail for Deakin, Australian Capital Territory
    Australian Mint. Deakin was gazetted in 1928 and is named after Alfred Deakin, second prime minister of Australia. Streets in Deakin are named after Governors...
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  • Thumbnail for Deakin government (1905–1908)
    The second Deakin government was the period of federal executive government of Australia led by Prime Minister Alfred Deakin. It lasted from 5 July 1905...
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  • “term” is defined as a contiguous period served as prime minister, both Alfred Deakin and Andrew Fisher served the greatest number of terms, with three each...
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  • federal politics between 1909 and 1917. The party was founded under Alfred Deakin's leadership as a merger of the Protectionist Party and Anti-Socialist...
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  • Rei Alfred Deakin Carter (3 December 1856 – 4 February 1938) was Conservative MP for Manchester Withington. He had been an alderman of the city of Manchester...
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  • South Wales. Its most prominent leaders were Sir Edmund Barton and Alfred Deakin, who were the first and second prime ministers of Australia. The party...
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  • Thumbnail for First Deakin ministry
    First Deakin ministry (Protectionist) was the 2nd ministry of the Government of Australia. It was led by the country's 2nd Prime Minister, Alfred Deakin. The...
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  • Thumbnail for Second Deakin ministry
    Second Deakin ministry (Protectionist) was the 5th ministry of the Government of Australia. It was led by the country's 2nd Prime Minister, Alfred Deakin. The...
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  • Thumbnail for Chris Watson
    supported the Liberal Protectionist governments of Edmund Barton and Alfred Deakin, and was a strong supporter of the White Australia policy. At the 1903...
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  • Thumbnail for Joseph Cook
    became known as "the fusion", Cook agreed to merge his party with Alfred Deakin's Protectionist Party in 1909, forming a unified anti-Labor party for...
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  • Australian Democracy at Old Parliament House. Retrieved 2 November 2021. "Alfred Deakin". Museum of Australian Democracy at Old Parliament House. Retrieved...
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  • Thumbnail for William Lyne
    1901, and later as a federal cabinet minister under Edmund Barton and Alfred Deakin. He is best known as the subject of the so called "Hopetoun Blunder"...
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  • Thumbnail for Prime Minister of Australia
    in the House of Representatives. The leaders of the three parties, Alfred Deakin, George Reid and Chris Watson each served as prime minister before losing...
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  • Thumbnail for Alfred Deakin College (Deakin University)
    Alfred Deakin College (formerly Deakin College) is a residential college at the Waurn Ponds campus of Deakin University. The first of the Deakin colleges...
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  • Thumbnail for Hallam Tennyson, 2nd Baron Tennyson
    the general public, but had a tense relationship with Prime Minister Alfred Deakin and was not offered an extension to his term. Tennyson retired to the...
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  • Thumbnail for Historical rankings of prime ministers of Australia
    points in the survey (and was judged to be the overall winner), although Alfred Deakin was nominated as the greatest prime minister by the most respondents...
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  • Thumbnail for Pattie Deakin
    philanthropic work. She was the wife of Alfred Deakin, the second Prime Minister of Australia (1903–04, 1905–08, and 1909–10). Deakin was born Elizabeth Martha Ann...
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  • Thumbnail for John Forrest
    capital site, Forrest was a firm supporter of Dalgety. In June 1905, Alfred Deakin's Protectionist Party formed an alliance with Labour to end Reid's government...
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  • Thumbnail for Catherine Deakin
    Catherine Sarah Deakin (also known as Katie and Kate) (1850–1937) was an Australian music teacher and pianist. She was the sister of Alfred Deakin, to whom she...
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