Lou Jensen

Eugene Dubois "Lou" Jensen (13 February 1915 – 1 July 2003) was a member of the Queensland Legislative Assembly.[1]

Lou Jensen
Member of the Queensland Legislative Assembly
for Bundaberg
In office
17 May 1969  12 November 1977
Preceded byTed Walsh
Succeeded byJim Blake
Personal details
Born
Eugene Dubois Jensen

(1915-02-13)13 February 1915
Port Darwin, Northern Territory, Australia
Died1 July 2003(2003-07-01) (aged 119)
Bundaberg, Queensland, Australia
Political partyIndependent
Other political
affiliations
Labor
SpouseOlive Margaret Magee (m.1941)
Alma materBrisbane Technical College
OccupationSugar Chemist

Biography

Jensen was born in Port Darwin, Northern Territory, the son Harold Ingemann and his wife Jane Elizabeth Ellen (née England). He was named after the Dutch paleoanthropologist, Eugène Dubois. He soon moved to Brisbane where he was educated at Nundah State School and Brisbane Grammar School before attending the Brisbane Technical College where he earned a Diploma of Sugar Chemistry. He worked as a sugar chemist at various sugar mills in Queensland and during World War II, Jensen worked as a chemist at munitions factories in Maribyrnong and St Marys.[1]

On 30 May 1941 he married Olive Margaret Magee and together had two daughters. Jensen died in Bundaberg in July 2003.[1]

Public career

When the Independent member for Bundaberg, Ted Walsh, retired at the 1969 Queensland state election, Jensen, a member of the Labor Party, won the seat. He held Bundaberg until the 1977 state election when he was defeated by Jim Blake.

For the last few weeks of his political career he sat as an Independent. This was due to the Labor Party increasing its members' levy from two per cent to 3.5 per cent in order to increase funds. Jensen raised the matter in the House and as a result was subsequently disendorsed by the party for the 1977 election in favour of Blake. He once wore a red T-shirt into parliament with "I'm a Labor rebel man" written on it to win a $50 bet with a friend. He was the Shadow Minister for Lands, Forestry and Water Resources during 1975–1976.

References

  1. "Former Members". Parliament of Queensland. 2015. Retrieved 9 May 2016.
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