Alfred Charles Davidson

{{Short description|Australian banker}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=September 2015}}

{{Use Australian English|date=September 2015}}

Sir Alfred Charles Davidson KBE (1882–1952) was an Australian banker and a domineering figure in the 1930s Australian business life. He was best known as the general manager of the Bank of New South Wales from 4 January 1929 (now Westpac Bank), when this bank entered its perhaps most critical periods of existence.R. F. Holder, 'Davidson, Sir Alfred Charles (1882–1952)', Australian Dictionary of Biography, National Centre of Biography, Australian National University, http://adb.anu.edu.au/biography/davidson-sir-alfred-charles-5895 He stayed on at the bank until June 1945 when he was persuaded to retire due to ill health.

Davidson was born on 1 April 1882 in Brisbane, son of bank manager James Madgwick Davidson, and his Queensland-born wife Lucy (née Cribb). He was the grandson of the factory owner and financier turned well-known Queensland humanitarian Alfred Davidson who migrated to Queensland in 1863 and made a name for himself as Queensland's representative of the British Aborigines' Protection Society.

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Category:1882 births

Category:1952 deaths

Category:Westpac people

Category:People from Brisbane

Category:Knights Commander of the Order of the British Empire

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