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・ William Godolphin
・ William Godolphin (1515–1570)
・ William Godolphin (1547–1589)
・ William Godolphin (1567–1613)
・ William Godolphin (diplomat)
・ William Godolphin (Royalist)
・ William Godolphin (Warden of the Stannaries)
・ William Godolphin, Marquess of Blandford
・ William Godshalk
・ William Godward
・ William Godwin
・ William Godwin (disambiguation)
・ William Godwin (MP)
・ William Godwin (sport shooter)
・ William Gibson
William Gibson (Australian politician)
・ William Gibson (bishop)
・ William Gibson (Canadian Independent Liberal politician)
・ William Gibson (Dean of Ferns)
・ William Gibson (disambiguation)
・ William Gibson (footballer 1920s)
・ William Gibson (footballer, born 1926)
・ William Gibson (historian)
・ William Gibson (ice hockey)
・ William Gibson (Liberal Party of Canada politician)
・ William Gibson (martyr)
・ William Gibson (NAACP)
・ William Gibson (playwright)
・ William Gibson (priest)
・ William Gibson (producer)


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William Gibson (Australian politician) : ウィキペディア英語版
William Gibson (Australian politician)

William Gerrand Gibson (19 May 1869 – 22 May 1955) was an Australian politician.
Gibson was born in Gisborne, Victoria and helped his father on his farm before operating general stores at Romsey and Lancefield. In November 1896, he married Mary Helen Young Patterson and in 1910 bought a large farm near Lismore.
==Political career==
In 1916, Victorian farmers became suspicious of price-fixing of the price of wheat under the War Precautions Act and established the Victorian Farmers' Union in response and Gibson was elected secretary of its Lismore branch. His brother, David Havelock (Harvey), won the Victorian Legislative Assembly seat of Grenville for the union in 1917. At a 1918 by-election, he won the federal seat of Corangamite for the Farmers' Union in 1921, defeating James Scullin on preferences. It was the first win for what would become the Country Party, which was formed later in 1921 from the merger of the Farmers Union and several kindred parties.
He successfully pressed for regulated wheat and dairy prices to be raised until the abolition of price controls in 1921. He was Postmaster-General from 1923 to 1929, and encouraged the construction of telephone lines, the extension of roadside mail deliveries and the building of post offices in country districts. He also encouraged the development of radio broadcasting. In 1928, he was appointed Minister for Works and Railways, as well.〔
Gibson was defeated with the Bruce-Page government at the 1929 elections and returned to farming. He won Corangamite back at the 1931 elections, but Joseph Lyons did not offer him a place in the ministry. At the 1934 elections, he was elected to the Senate and he remained a senator until he retired in 1947.〔
Gibson died at Lismore, survived by a son and daughter. His wife and another daughter had already died.〔

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