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    • British Conservative politician and colonial governor

      • Charles Bathurst, 1st Viscount Bledisloe, GCMG, KBE, PC (21 September 1867 – 3 July 1958) was a British Conservative politician and colonial governor. He was Governor-General of New Zealand from 1930 to 1935.
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  2. Charles Bathurst, 1st Viscount Bledisloe, GCMG, KBE, PC (21 September 1867 – 3 July 1958) was a British Conservative politician and colonial governor. He was Governor-General of New Zealand from 1930 to 1935.

  3. University of Oxford. Charles Bathurst PC (1754 – 13 August 1831), known as Charles Bragge from 1754 to 1804, was a British politician of the early 19th century.

  4. Charles Bathurst, 1st Viscount Bledisloe (1867-1958), Agriculturalist and public servant. Sitter in 14 portraits.

  5. He was chairman of the Royal Commission on Land Drainage in 1927 which laid the foundations for the Act of 1930. In 1928 he went to South America and negotiated the Bledisloe Agreement, which governs the inspection of animals for export as meat to the United Kingdom.

  6. By his brief will, dated 24 June 1829, he left all his personal estate, which was sworn under £16,000, to his wife.33 He was succeeded in turn by his surviving sons Charles (1790-1863) and the Rev. William Hiley Bathurst (1796-1877), whose grandson Charles Bathurst of Lydney (1867-1958) was created Lord Bledisloe in 1918.

  7. Bathurst, Charles, 1st Viscount Bledisloe, 1867-1958, Bledisloe, Lord, 1867-1958 Lawyer, politician, agriculturalist, Governor-General of New Zealand 1930-1935. Appointed 1929. Knighted and elevated to the peerage 1917. Married Bertha Susan Lopes 1898. 2 sons, 1 daughter. Bertha died 1926.

  8. Charles Bathurst, 1st Viscount Bledisloe, GCMG KBE PC (21 September 1867 – 3 July 1958) was a British Conservative politician and colonial governor. He was Governor-General of New Zealand from 1930 to 1935. Contents. 1 Early life. 2 Member of Parliament and the First World War. 3 Governor-General of New Zealand. 4 Later life. 5 Family. 6 Sports.