Joan Chambers
Joan Heywood Chambers, née Murray (born 18 March 1930) is a former Australian politician.
She was born in Elsternwick to company manager James McNab Murray and Annie Hale Shaw. She attended Ormond State Scohol and Tintern Church of England Girls Grammar School before receiving a Bachelor of Arts (1950) and Diploma of Education (1951) from the University of Melbourne. She became a secondary schoolteacher at Kyabram in 1952, at Hampton in 1953, at Mortlake from 1968 to 1977 and at Ballarat from 1978 to 1979 and from 1982. On 21 November 1953 she married Major John Alexander Chambers, a soldier-turned-farmer; they had five children. Chambers joined the Liberal Party in 1969 and held a number of positions including secretary of the Alfredton branch (1978–81), a member of the federal electorate council for the Division of Wannon, and a member of the state executive (1977–78). In 1979 she was elected to the Victorian Legislative Assembly as the member for Ballarat South, but she was defeated in 1982. She unsuccessfully sought preselection for Warrnambool in 1983, and ran again for Ballarat South in 1988, losing narrowly and taking the result to the Court of Disputed Returns. She was an independent candidate for Ballarat West in 1992.[1]
References
- ↑ Parliament of Victoria (2002). "Chambers, Joan Heywood". re-member: a database of all Victorian MPs since 1851. Parliament of Victoria. Retrieved 20 September 2014.
Victorian Legislative Assembly | ||
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Preceded by Bill Stephen |
Member for Ballarat South 1979–1982 |
Succeeded by Frank Sheehan |