Charles Sommers
Metropolitan Province | |
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Personal details | |
Born | Victoria, Australia | 20 January 1862
Died | 19 March 1922 Cottesloe, Western Australia, Australia | (aged 60)
Charles Sommers (20 January 1862 – 19 March 1922) was an Australian businessman and politician who was a member of the Legislative Council of Western Australia from 1900 to 1918. He was a minister in the first government of George Leake.
Sommers was born in
Morwell (in the Gippsland region). Sommers was elected to the Traralgon Shire Council in 1883, aged only 21. He returned to Geelong in 1886, and was elected to the Geelong Municipal Council, serving until 1894.[1] The following year, Sommers left for Western Australia and settled in Coolgardie, where he had interests in various mines and was the managing director of a hotel that had previously been owned by his brother. He was elected mayor of the Coolgardie Municipality in 1899, and would serve until 1903.[2]
Sommers was elected to parliament at the 1900 Legislative Council elections, replacing
Metropolitan Province, succeeding the retiring Sir George Shenton. He was re-elected in 1912, but in 1918 was defeated by Henry Saunders. Sommers died in Perth in 1922, aged 60. He had married Agnes Donaldson in 1886, with whom he had four children.[2]
References
- ^ "MR. CHARLES SOMMERS, MINISTER FOR LANDS.", The Inquirer and Commercial News (Perth), 31 May 1901.
- ^ a b Charles Sommers – Biographical Register of Members of the Parliament of Western Australia. Retrieved 15 June 2016.