Albert Whitford | |
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Delegates to the Queensland Police Union third annual conference. Whitford is in the front row, second on the left.
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Member of the Queensland Legislative Assembly for Burrum |
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In office 16 Mar 1918 – 9 Oct 1920 |
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Preceded by | Colin Rankin |
Succeeded by | William Brand |
Personal details | |
Born |
Albert Edward Victor Whitford 1877 Woolwich, England |
Died | 29 January 1924 (aged 46 or 47) Brisbane, Queensland, Australia |
Resting place | Toowong Cemetery |
Nationality | English Australian |
Political party | ALP |
Spouse(s) | Ethel Maud Scott (m.1897) |
Occupation | Tailor |
Albert Edward Victor Whitford (1877 – 29 January 1924) was a tailor and member of the Queensland Legislative Assembly. He was shot dead in Brisbane in 1924.
Whitford was born in Woolwich, England, to parents Charles Whitford and his wife Dora (née Kelly). He was a tailor in Inverell in 1906 before heading to Childers in 1910 to continue his trade.
Whitford, representing the ALP, first stood for the seat of Burrum in the Queensland Legislative Assembly at the 1912 state election only to be beaten by the sitting member, Colin Rankin. He was once again beaten by Rankin at the 1915 state election but finally won the seat in 1918. He held the seat until 1920.
In 1897, Whitford married Ethel Maud Scott and together had two sons and two daughters.
Whitford was shot dead on the corner of Market Square and Adelaide Street in Brisbane in 1924. The gunman shot Whitford once in the neck and once in the forehead, and when Whitford fell to the ground, stood over him and fired three more shots killing him instantly. The gunman was then heard to say "That will fix you, you ----".
The gunman, later identified as James William Laydon, then coolly walked away. Police soon caught him and charged him with murder. Whitford was buried the next day in the Toowong Cemetery.