Robert Booth (Australian politician)
{{Short description|Australian politician}}
{{for|the member for Leichhardt from 1904 to 1907|Robert Coulter Booth}}
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{{Use Australian English|date=December 2015}}
Robert Booth (24 May 1851 – 2 March 1901) was an Australian politician.
He was born in Bathurst to farmers Patrick and Elizabeth Booth, and attended school locally and then at Cooks River. He became a solicitor, establishing a practice in Dubbo. He was also involved in agriculture and local politics, becoming an alderman and later mayor of Dubbo. In 1891 he was elected to the New South Wales Legislative Assembly as the Free Trade member for Bogan. He did not contest the 1894 election and made no further runs for colony-wide office.{{cite NSW Parliament |title=Mr Robert Booth (1851-1901) |id=944 |former=Yes |accessdate=16 June 2019 }} Booth died in Sydney in 1901. He shot himself in the head with a pistol while being driven through The Domain in a horse-drawn cab. A coronial inquest returned a verdict of suicide, and evidence was heard that he had been depressed and suffered from insomnia for some time before his death.[http://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/114018981 "MR. ROBERT BOOTH'S DEATH."], The Evening News, 5 March 1901.
References
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{{s-bef|before=Robert Butcher}}
{{s-ttl|title=Member for Bogan|years=1891–1894|alongside=Cass/A'Beckett, Morgan}}
{{s-non|reason=Abolished}}
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Category:Colony of New South Wales people
Category:Members of the New South Wales Legislative Assembly
Category:Free Trade Party politicians
Category:19th-century Australian politicians
Category:Australian politicians who died by suicide