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  1. Sir John McEwen. Australian politician and 18th Prime Minister of Australia (after the disappearance of Harold Holt), was born at "Linden", Main Street Chiltern, Victoria in 1900. John was the eldest child of David James McEwen (d.1907), a pharmacist from Ireland, and his second wife Amy Ellen, née Porter (d.1901), who was Victorian born ...

  2. John McEwen was born in Toronto in 1945. He currently lives and works in Hillsdale, Ontario. Co-founder and former director of A Space, John McEwen was honoured in 2007 with a Doctorate of Fine Arts from the University of Lethbridge, Alberta.

  3. John McEwen was a very tense man – undoubtedly a factor in the dermatitis that was to become in later years a constant affliction. He was over conscious at times of being a self-taught and self-made man, deprived of the advantages of the education so evident in his senior colleague in Government, R.G. Menzies.

  4. Sir John (‘Black Jack’) McEwen CH GCMG PC (1900-1980) was leader of the Australian Country Party and deputy prime minister from 1958 to 1971. He took up a land grant after war service and built up a productive holding in Victoria. He joined the Country Party at 19, and became minister for the interior in 1937, a portfolio with many and varied responsibilities including immigration ...

  5. John McEwen was the prime minister of Australia from 1967 to 1968. He served in the House of Representatives from 1934 to 1971.

  6. McEwen was prime minister from 19 December 1967 to 10 January 1968, when he stood down for new Liberal Party leader, John Gorton. 1970 to 1979 1 Feb 1971: Left Parliament. McEwen served as Deputy Prime Minister and Minister for Trade in Gorton’s government until he retired from Parliament in Feb 1971. 1980 to 1989 20 Nov 1980: Death

  7. 30 de jun. de 2020 · Ancien premier vice-président de la Fédération équestre internationale, John McEwen, à la tête de son comité vétérinaire entre 2006 et 2018, est un acteur incontournable de l’instance. À soixante-quinze ans, le Britannique quitte progressivement ses fonctions pour profiter davantage des siens.