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Alexander McLeod-Lindsay, (24 December 1934 – 17 September 2009) was a Scots-born Australian who is noted for having served nine years in jail for attempting to murder his wife, but who was later exonerated. ==Earlier Life== McLeod-Lindsay’s father, William McLeod-Lindsay, was a hotel waiter. His mother, Jessie Colligan, was a hotel housemaid. They were not married and McLeod-Lindsay was raised by his blind grandparents with the help of his aunts.〔Brown, ''SMH'', 21 September 2008〕 McLeod-Lindsay grew up in Glasgow. At age 16 he migrated to Australia under that country’s assisted migration scheme. McLeod-Lindsay was a “ten pound pom”. In Australia McLeod-Lindsay was apprenticed in the printing trade and served in the Australian Citizens Military Forces, the then name of the Australian Army Reserve. In 1956 McLeod-Lindsay married Pamela Parsons, a nurse. They had three children, Bruce (1960), Alyson (1962) and Andrew (1963). The couple bought a house in the southern Sydney suburb of Sylvania, New South Wales. McLeod-Lindsay worked in a garage during the day and as a waiter at the Sylvania Hotel at nights. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Alexander McLeod-Lindsay」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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