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・ Arthur Frets Assa
・ Arthur Friedenreich
・ Arthur Friedheim
・ Arthur Friedman
・ Arthur Froehlich
・ Arthur Frommer
・ Arthur Frost
・ Arthur Frost (footballer)
・ Arthur Frothingham
・ Arthur Fry
・ Arthur Fry (footballer)
・ Arthur Fulcher
・ Arthur Fuller
・ Arthur Fulton
・ Arthur Furguson
Arthur Fydell Lindsay
・ Arthur G. Bedeian
・ Arthur G. Cohen
・ Arthur G. Crane
・ Arthur G. Dorland
・ Arthur G. Elliott, Jr.
・ Arthur G. Fisk
・ Arthur G. Hansen
・ Arthur G. James
・ Arthur G. Jenkins
・ Arthur G. Jones-Williams
・ Arthur G. Miller
・ Arthur G. Nicholls
・ Arthur G. Robertson
・ Arthur G. Robinson


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Arthur Fydell Lindsay : ウィキペディア英語版
Arthur Fydell Lindsay
Arthur Fydell Lindsay (c. 1816 – 10 May 1895) was a politician in the early days of the colony of South Australia.
==History==
Lindsay was born in Boston, Lincolnshire, and emigrated to South Australia on the arriving in December 1836 in company with Governor Hindmarsh, James Hurtle Fisher (the Resident Commissioner), Osmond Gilles (Treasurer), and the Rev. C. B. Howard (Colonial Chaplain), and was present at the proclamation of the province under the historic gum tree at Glenelg.
Lindsay was trained as a surveyor and worked in that profession for a number of years, notably laying out the town of Hindmarsh for the Governor (who with his wife personally owned the land) in a partnership with the Governor's son John as "Lindsay & Hindmarsh". In July 1839 they transferred ownership of the land to A. F. Lindsay and George Milner Stephen.〔Parsons, Ronald ''Hindmarsh Town'', Corporation of the Town of Hindmarsh 1974 ISBN 0 9598793 0 7〕 then took up a farm in the Encounter Bay district.
Lindsay served as the first member of the House of Assembly for the single-person electorate of Encounter Bay for the terms March 1857 – April 1860, when his colleagues were Benjamin Herschel Babbage and Henry Strangways. He was succeeded by (the unrelated) John Lindsay, then served the same electorate April 1870 – December 1871, with Emil Wentzell; and September 1873 – April 1878, with William Rogers and James Boucaut. He argued strongly for the construction of light railways on the narrow gauge system, but received little support, though he was later largely vindicated.
He donated land for St. Augustine's church at Victor Harbor (he also gave land for the Methodist and Presbyterian churches), and was their third lay reader, serving in that position for over twenty years.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Church History )

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