Background
Arthur Dalgety Bridges was born in Sydney, New South Wales, in 1901, the son of schoolteacher Frederick Bridges and Ivy May Campbell.
Arthur Dalgety Bridges was born in Sydney, New South Wales, in 1901, the son of schoolteacher Frederick Bridges and Ivy May Campbell.
He served as Leader of the Government in the council as well as on the Askin cabinet as Vice-President of the Executive Council and Minister for Child and Social Welfare from 1965 to his death in office in 1968. After qualifying as an accountant in 1924, Bridges rose to be a Fellow of the Institute of Chartered Accountants in Australia (Farm Credit Administration) and a Fellow of the Chartered Institute of Secretaries. Bridges also became established in his own firm, Bridges and Steel (later AD Bridges & Company).
Becoming recognised as a leading financial adviser, Bridges served as a director of numerous companies in a variety of areas.
Initially serving as a councillor, Bridges rose to be New South Wales vice-president and a Federal Councillor from 1946 until 1965. Bridges was elected to the indirectly elected New South Wales Legislative Council on 14 March 1946 and took his seat on 23 April 1946.
Bridges eventually replaced Hector Clayton as Liberal leader in the Council in 1962, thereby becoming Leader of the New South Wales Opposition in the Legislative Council. He served thus until May 1962, whe Liberal leader Robert Askin led the Liberal/Country Coalition to victory at the 1965 election.
As the now Leader of the Government in the Legislative Council, Bridges was sworn into the cabinet as Vice-President of the Executive Council and as Minister for Child Welfare and Social Welfare.
Bridges served in government until his death in office aged 66 on 22 May 1968.
Through this, Bridges joined the conservative United Australia Party and its successor, the Democratic Party.
He was a member of the New South Wales Legislative Council for the for 22 years from 1946 to 1968 representing the Liberal Party of Australia, becoming Leader of the New South Wales Opposition in the Legislative Council from 1962 until 1965. As a councillor in both parties, Bridges was a member of the committee which established Liberal Party of Australia in 1945-1946. While in parliament, Bridges was vice-president of the Royal Blind Society an honorary secretary of Blinded Ex-serviceman"s Club, a committee member of Red Cross Blood Transfusion Service, the vice-president of Young Men"s Christian Association and a fellow of Senate of University of Sydney from 1967 until 1968.