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・ Charles Henry Grant
・ Charles Henry Hall
・ Charles Henry Hall (priest)
・ Charles Henry Hamilton Wright
・ Charles Henry Hardin
・ Charles Henry Harrod
・ Charles Henry Hart
・ Charles Henry Hartshorne
・ Charles Henry Hitchcock
・ Charles Henry Hopwood
・ Charles Henry Howard
・ Charles Henry Howell
・ Charles Henry Hussey
・ Charles Henry Hylton Stewart
・ Charles Haviland Mekeel
Charles Hawker
・ Charles Hawkins
・ Charles Hawkins (cricketer)
・ Charles Hawks, Jr.
・ Charles Hawksley
・ Charles Hawley
・ Charles Hawtrey
・ Charles Hawtrey (actor born 1858)
・ Charles Hawtrey (actor born 1914)
・ Charles Hay
・ Charles Hay (ice hockey)
・ Charles Hay (politician)
・ Charles Hay Cameron
・ Charles Hay, 13th Earl of Erroll
・ Charles Hay, 16th Earl of Kinnoull


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Charles Hawker : ウィキペディア英語版
Charles Hawker

Charles Allan Seymour Hawker (16 May 1894 – 25 October 1938) was an Australian politician.
Hawker was born at Bungaree homestead, near Clare, South Australia. He was the second son of Michael Seymour Hawker, manager of the Hawker family stations, and his wife Elizabeth Begg, née McFarlane, and grandson of George Charles Hawker and nephew of Bertram Robert Hawker. Hawker was educated at Geelong Grammar School, Hawker and Trinity College, Cambridge, earning Bachelor and Master of Arts degrees in 1919 and 1922 respectively. While at Cambridge he enlisted in the British Army to serve in World War I. Hawker was commissioned as a temporary lieutenant in the 6th (Service) Battalion, Somerset Light Infantry (Prince Albert's). He saw action on the Western Front in Ypres. Fighting in the Battle of Passchendaele, Hawker was injured, including the loss of an eye.〔(【引用サイトリンク】publisher=The Charles Allan Seymour Hawker Scholarship )
Despite his injuries, Hawker returned to the front with the rank of Captain in May 1917. Hawker was severely wounded again on 4 October 1917, at Broodseinde, Belgium during the 3rd battle of Ypres. He was paralysed from the waist down. However, after a series of operations and rehabilitation, he was able to walk with two sticks, although his legs remained in surgical irons thereafter.〔Dirk Van Dissel, 'Hawker, Charles Allan (1894–1938)', Australian Dictionary of Biography, National Centre of Biography, Australian National University, http://adb.anu.edu.au/biography/hawker-charles-allan-6603/text11371, published in hardcopy 1983, accessed online 21 April 2014.〕
Hawker returned to South Australia in 1920, resumed his studies and became involved in family agricultural holdings. He became increasingly interested in trade as well as in political movements. Hawker joined the State council of the Returned Sailors' and Soldiers' Imperial League of Australia in 1921 and served as vice-president. In 1927 he joined the Liberal Federation of South Australia and became the South Australian member of the Commonwealth Board of Trade in 1928.
==Political career==
In 1929 was elected as a member of the Australian House of Representatives, representing the electorate of Wakefield for the United Australia Party. He was appointed Minister for Markets and Minister for Repatriation in first ministry of Prime Minister Joseph Lyons and was the youngest member of the ministry. On 12 April 1932 he was replaced as Minister for Repatriation by Charles Marr and the Markets portfolio was renamed Commerce. On 23 September 1932, he resigned from the ministry in protest at its refusal to reduce parliamentary salaries in response to the Great Depression, having crossed the floor to vote as a minority in a controversial day in Parliament, and did not serve as a minister again, although he continued to represent the people of Wakefield as their elected representative.〔
Hawker travelled extensively, researching issues of trade and farming, and he published his research in pamphlets and treatises and gave lectures on issues of agriculture and pastoral work.〔Agriculture in Germany and Russia', ''Border Watch'', Saturday 29 February 1936 ()〕
Hawker died in a plane crash near Mount Dandenong, Victoria in 1938. The Australian Electoral Division of Hawker and the Canberra suburb of Hawker, Australian Capital Territory are named in his honour, and the Charles Allan Seymour Hawker Scholarship was established by his sister Kathleen Lilias Needham in 1991 to fund Australian university education.〔(【引用サイトリンク】url=http://www.hawkerscholarship.org )〕 His relative David Hawker is a former Speaker of the Australian House of Representatives.

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