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  1. 22 de oct. de 2011 · 3 ‘Portrait of Prime Minister Ben Chifley, 18 May 1948’, by William Henry Bale, Bib ID: 4586730. 4 The expression ‘true believer’ was popularise d by Bob Ellis’ eponymous television series .

  2. Ben Chifley became Prime Minister after the death of his close friend John Curtin. [1] Having together steered the nation through the tumult of World War II, to Chifley fell the task of Australia’s post-war reconstruction, a labour he took to with vision and commitment.

  3. 28 de mar. de 2023 · 960 square kilometres (370 sq mi) Surface area. 2.2 hectares (5.4 acres) Website. www.bathurst.nsw.gov.au. Ben Chifley Dam, or Chifley Dam, is a rock and earth-fill embankment dam across the Campbells River in the central west region of New South Wales, Australia. The main purpose of the dam is to supply potable water to the city of Bathurst.

  4. It has been 75 years since Ben Chifley became Australia’s 16 th Prime Minister. To mark the occasion Chifley Research Centre is releasing an ebook to celebrate and commemorate Chifley’s time as Prime Minister. We asked four authors who’ve written books about Ben Chifley as well as the Federal Member for Chifley to give their thoughts on ...

  5. 3 de may. de 2015 · Ben Chifley, the son of a blacksmith and the prime minister of Australia from 1945 to 1949, was born at Bathurst in 1885 and maintained his connections with the city until the end of his life. He joined the New South Wales railways at 17 and, at 26, became the youngest locomotive driver in the state. Chifley became a union representative in ...

  6. SEE AND DO. This new exhibition at MoAD is a journey through time with the voices, events and debates that shaped our nation, making us who we are today. Contribute what the Whitlam Government meant to you for the Whitlam Prime Ministerial Collection. We talk about Menzies’s contemporary legacy and how his values can be upheld.

  7. Ben Chifley (1945–49): Australian Labor Party; Harold Holt (1966–67): Liberal Party of Australia; John McEwen (1967–68): Australian Country Party; John Gorton (1968–71): Liberal Party of Australia; William McMahon (1971–72): Liberal Party of Australia; Gough Whitlam (1972–75): Australian Labor Party; Malcolm Fraser (1975–83 ...