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  1. Alfred Deakins legacy 100 years on – 28 October 2. “Alfred Deakin is impossible to summarise neatly,a fact reinforced by the. diverse scholarship on him, especially the range of ‘story-tellers’ of the last 50 years. The task to understand Deakin’s multiple dimensions, is so daunting that. virtually all those who have tried have opted ...

  2. Alfred Deakin Professional Timeline. 1886-1890 Chief Secretary and Minister for Water Supply. 1887 Victorian delegate at Imperial Conference in London. 1887 Declined knighthood offered by British Government at age of 30 years old. 1889-1900 Member for Essendon and Flemington in Victorian Legislative Assembly.

  3. First, not everyone shared Alfred Deakin’s views on race and its political application. It may be unrealistic to have expected Alfred Deakin to listen to objections made by the peoples who were subject to his racist legislation, but there were critics of his position inside and outside of parliament, as well as critics in London.

  4. Second prime minister of Australia; Federation leader. Deakin was the second prime minister of Australia. He led the Federation movement in Victoria. Only Edmund Barton worked harder to create the new nation. Alfred Deakin was very religious. As a young man, he stopped going to church because he could not believe in Christianity, but he ...

  5. 16 December 1903. This general election was Deakin’s first as Prime Minister, an office he had held only 3 months. He was unopposed in his Ballaarat seat. The Protectionists won 26 seats, the Free Trade Party 25 and Labor 23, so the 3 parties were nearly equal. At this election, the first where women throughout the Commonwealth had the same ...

  6. Alfred De Lissa has written: 'An Empire league' -- subject(s): Imperial federation Who is known as The father or Federation? Edmund Barton Alfred Deakins Sir Henry parkes

  7. Australian Natives Association (1884-c.1919) Protectionist Party (1901-09) federal parliamentary leader (1903-09) Commonwealth Liberal Party/People's Liberal Party (1909-c.16) federal parliamentary leader (1909-13) Alfred Deakin was the Prime Minister of Australia from 1903 to 1904, from 1905 to 1908 and from 1909 to 1910.