John Lane Mullins

Monsignor
The Honourable

John Lane Mullins
PC KCSG JP MA
Member of Legislative Council of New South Wales
In office
17 July 1917  22 April 1934
Personal details
Born 12 June 1857
Sydney, Colony of New South Wales
Died 24 February 1939
Elizabeth Bay, New South Wales
Resting place South Head Cemetery
Political party Nationalist
Spouse(s) Jane (d. 15 January 1926)
Relations Sir Thomas Hughes (brother in-law)

Mons. The Hon. John Lane Mullins PC, KCSG, JP (12 June 1857 24 February 1939) was an Australian politician and prominent Catholic layperson in the late nineteenth and early twentieth century New South Wales.

He was born in Sydney to clerk James Mullins and Eliza Lane from County Cork, Ireland. He studied at the University of Sydney, becoming a solicitor in 1885. On 14 April 1885 he married Jane Hughes, with whom he had five children. He served on Sydney City Council from 1900 to 1904 and from 1906 to 1912, and in 1903 was appointed Knight of St Gregory and Privy Chamberlain to Pope Pius X. From 1917 to 1934 he was a Nationalist (later United Australia Party) member of the New South Wales Legislative Council. Lane Mullins died at Elizabeth Bay in 1939. John Lane Mullins was an avid book collector and was known as the Australian founding father of the Australian Bookplate Movement and was the first President of the Australian Ex Libris Society.[1]

He is buried at South Head Cemetery in Vaucluse, New South Wales.

References

  1. Parliament of New South Wales (2008). "Mr John Lane Mullins (1857-1939)". Former Members. Parliament of New South Wales. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 9 September 2015.
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