William Henley Rawlings
William Henley Rawlings (28 February 1848 – 5 August 1906) was a member of both the Queensland Legislative Council and the Queensland Legislative Assembly.[1] Early lifeRawlings was born near Bristol, England, to William Rawlings and his wife Margaret Eliza (née Edwards).[1] Trained for the sea, he sailed to Sydney in 1869 and on to New Zealand where he engaged in seafaring on the west coast for several years.[2] In 1875, he was back in Australia and working as a miner in the Parkes goldfields.[2] Moving to Queensland and settling in the Herberton district in 1883, he undertook several jobs including labourer, assayer, miner, and prospector.[2] By 1890, he was working as an Organiser for the Charters Towers Miners' Union.[1] Political career and deathRawlings was nominated as the Labour Party candidate for the seat of Woothakata in the 1893 colonial election. Victorious over his competitors William Little and W.M. Bonar,[3] he held the seat for three years before losing to John Newell in the 1896 election.[4] Rawlings was appointed to the Queensland Legislative Council in July 1906[5] but served for less than a month before his death in August of that year.[1] His funeral proceeded from the home of Michael Woods at Spring Hill to Parliament House, and then on to the Toowong Cemetery.[2][6] References
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