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  1. JOHN GORTON. Member of the Privy Council (1968), Order of the Companion of Honour (1971), Order of St Michael and St George - Knight Grand Cross (1977), Companion of the Order of Australia (1988) Liberal. 10 January 1968 — 10 March 1971 3 years, 60 days. John Gorton became Australia's 19th prime minister when the Liberal Party elected him ...

  2. Sir John Grey Gorton (9 September 1911 – 19 May 2002) was the 19th Prime Minister of Australia. He was elected Liberal Party leader after Harold Holt was drowned. He was a fighter pilot during the Second World War and had a battle scarred face. He said he was "Australian to the bootheels". Bettina Brown married Gorton in 1935.

  3. 21 de may. de 2002 · Mon 20 May 2002 21.39 EDT. In December 1967, Sir John Gorton, who has died aged 90, found himself prime minister of Australia almost by accident, after his predecessor Harold Holt drowned in the ...

  4. John Gorton attended Headfort College in Killara, and then boarded at Shore, the Sydney Church of England Grammar School. In 1927, Kathleen and Ruth moved to London. Gorton, aged 16, spent some time on his father’s orchard ‘Mystic Park’, Lake Kangaroo, near Kerang, in Victoria. He finished school as a boarder at Geelong Grammar ...

  5. nl.wikipedia.org › wiki › John_GortonJohn Gorton - Wikipedia

    John Grey Gorton (Melbourne , 9 september 1911 - Sydney (New South Wales), 19 mei 2002) was een Australisch politicus. Hij was de 19e premier van Australië. Levensloop. Gorton studeerde geschiedenis, politicologie en economie aan de Universiteit van Oxford in Engeland.

  6. Prime Minister John Gorton. John Gorton was elected as Liberal Party leader on 9 January 1968 and was sworn in as Prime Minister the next day. He became the first senator to be appointed Prime Minister. He resigned from the Senate on 31 January to contest the by-election for Holt’s former seat of Higgins on 24 February.

  7. 24 de jul. de 1993 · Interior: 18 December 1963 to 4 March 1964. Works: 18 December 1963 to 28 February 1967. Commonwealth Activities in Education and Research: 18 December 1963 to 14 December 1966. Education and Science: 14 December 1966 to 28 February 1968. Defence: 10 March to 13 August 1971.