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・ William Knightley-Smith
・ William Knighton
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・ William Knollys (1694–1740)
・ William Knollys, 1st Earl of Banbury
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・ William Knox
・ William Knox (bishop)
・ William Knox (British Army officer)
・ William Knox (footballer)
・ William Knox (MP)
・ William Knox (Queensland politician)
・ William Knox (Scottish poet)
William Knox (Victorian politician)
・ William Knox D'Arcy
・ William Knox Schroeder
・ William Knox Simms
・ William Knuckles
・ William Knutzen
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・ William Knyvett (disambiguation)
・ William Koch
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・ William Koger House (Smithsonia, Alabama)
・ William Kohl


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William Knox (Victorian politician) : ウィキペディア英語版
William Knox (Victorian politician)

William Knox (25 April 1850 – 25 August 1913)〔
〕 was an Australian businessman and politician.
==Life and career==
Knox was born in Melbourne and his family later moved to Horsham and Ballarat. He was educated at Scotch College, Melbourne and joined the Bank of Victoria in 1866 and worked in various country branches. In January 1884 he married Catherine Mary McMurtrie. In 1885, he became secretary of the recently formed Broken Hill Proprietary Co. Ltd〔 and in 1888, his yearly salary was increased from £75 to £1500. He effectively ran the complex organisation of a company that became Australia's biggest company and the world's biggest silver miner. He resigned as secretary in 1893 to become managing director of the Mount Lyell Mining and Railway Company, but was immediately appointed to BHP's board, a position he retained until 1910.
Knox was a councillor on Malvern Shire from 1892 to 1910 and its president from 1892 to 1895. He was elected to the Victorian Legislative Council to represent South Eastern Province in 1898.〔 He supported the federation of Australia and was elected as the first member for Kooyong at the inaugural 1901 election, initially as a member of the Free Trade Party, although he later supported some of the protectionist policies of the Protectionist Party. Knox was responsible for moving a motion to begin each sitting day with prayers. He resigned from parliament shortly after his re-election in 1910, having suffered a stroke. Knox was also one of the seven members of the Prahran and Malvern Tramways Trust, established in 1908 to build part of Melbourne's electric tram network.
The Knoxs had five sons and two daughters. When he and his wife and their younger children were visiting England in 1913, he died at Folkestone, Kent. He had declined a knighthood. His sons included:
*George Hodges (1885–1960), appointed CMG in 1917, speaker of the Victorian Legislative Assembly (1942–1947)
*Robert Wilson (1890 - 1973), businessman, knighted 1934
*William Johnstone, awarded the Military Cross and died of wounds in 1917
*MacGregor, awarded the Military Cross and permanently incapacitated

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