Mary Meillon

Australian politician
The basics

Quick Facts

IntroAustralian politician
PlacesAustralia
wasPolitician
Work fieldPolitics
Gender
Female
Birth4 October 1919
Death9 June 1980 (aged 60 years)
The details

Biography

Mary Meillon, née Lawson (4 October 1919 – 9 June 1980) was an Australian politician. She was the Liberal member for Murray in the New South Wales Legislative Assembly from 1973 to 1980.
Born Mary Lawson in Deniliquin, her father Joe Lawson was also a New South Wales politician. She attended Hornsby Girls' High School before working as a stenographer. She married Francis Meillon on 5 September 1942, with whom she had two daughters.
When her father, the member for Murray in the New South Wales Legislative Assembly, died in 1973, Meillon was selected as the Liberal Party's candidate for the by-election to replace him (Joe Lawson had been an ex-Country Party Independent). She narrowly defeated the Country Party's candidate, Bruce Jeffery, who later represented the Oxley and Port Macquarie electorates. Meillon was the fourth woman elected to the Assembly, the first Liberal woman, and the first woman to win a seat since 1946. Defeating an independent Jeffery in the 1973 state election, she held the seat against challenges from Independent Country candidates (since the Coalition agreement prohibited the party from endorsing candidates to run against sitting Liberals) until her death in Deniliquin in 1980; the by-election to replace her was won by future federal Nationals leader Tim Fischer.

The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.