At the 1904 state election, Nanson had switched seats, defeating Patrick Stone in the seat of Greenough. His old seat, Murchison, was lost to the Labor Party.[2] However, Nanson did not re-contest his seat at the 1905 election, instead travelling to England to study law. He was called to the bar in 1908, and later that year returned to Australia, reclaiming the seat of Greenough at the 1908 state election. Nanson was elevated to the ministry for a third time in May 1909, as a minister without portfolio in the Moore ministry. In a reshuffle the following month, he was made Attorney-General and Minister for Education. He retained his portfolios when Frank Wilson replaced Newton Moore as premier in September 1910, but the government was defeated at the 1911 election.[1]
Later life
Nanson left for England in 1913, and did not re-contest Greenough at the 1914 election. He died in Wimborne, Dorset, in February 1916, aged 52.[1]
Private life
He and Janet Drummond Durlacher were married in 1887. She was a journalist working for the West Australian. They had two children but only one survived to be an adult. Janet Nanson wrote under the nom de plume of "Sigma" in Perth and when she worked for the Western Mail as the founding writer of "Aunt Mary". She turned to writing about politics for the while her husband was the Morning Herald's owner. She died in 1943 in Perth.[3]
References
1234John Leighton Nanson – Biographical Register of Members of the Parliament of Western Australia. Retrieved 3 June 2016.
12Black, David; Prescott, Valerie (1997). Election statistics: Legislative Assembly of Western Australia, 1890-1996. Perth, [W.A.]: Western Australian Parliamentary History Project and Western Australian Electoral Commission. ISBN0730984095.
↑Battye, O. K., "Janet Nanson (1868–1943)", Australian Dictionary of Biography, Canberra: National Centre of Biography, Australian National University, retrieved 26 December 2023