Wilfrid Kent Hughes is a notable Australian figure with a long record in military, politics, and public service. To provide you with the latest news, I’ll summarize what recent sources show and point you to where you can verify updates.
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Recent coverage generally highlights his historical role as a soldier, Olympian organizer, and public official. Current-dated news articles about him tend to revisit his WWI/WWII experiences, his leadership with Melbourne’s Olympic organizing efforts, and his political career. For precise “latest” items, please check major Australian outlets or archival sites that update obituaries or retrospective pieces.
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If you’re looking for the most up-to-date reporting, I recommend checking:
- Major Australian newspapers’ online archives and current affairs sections for any obituaries, anniversary notes, or new biographical pieces.
- Australian Dictionary of Biography and national library finding aids for cataloged updates or newly surfaced documents.
- Encyclopedia or history-focused outlets that periodically publish new scholarship or reconstructions of Kent Hughes’s life.
Illustrative resource note
- A biography entry and archival descriptions exist that cover his service in WWI and WWII, his Rhodes Scholarship, and his Olympic organizing work. These sources provide dates, roles, and recognitions that are helpful for a quick timeline.[1][3]
If you’d like, I can perform a focused fetch to pull the latest items from specific Australian outlets or archives and summarize them with citations.
Sources
Although his background did not seem to meet the Gullett characterisation of the typical candidate for the Light Horse, Kent Hughes had an outstanding career with the AIF. He served in Palestine, Syria and Sinai and at Gallipoli. He arrived at Gallipoli on 16 May 1915, and was wounded in action on 19 June (gunshot wound to forearm); he was admitted to the hospital ship Gascon, and returned to duty on 23 June. On 31 August he was evacuated to hospital in Egypt (his record states "sick"), and he...
emhs.org.auIt’s no secret that Kent Hughes and the Montreal Canadiens are on the hunt for a couple of essential pieces this Summer, a second-line center and a right-shot defenseman, or at the very least a defenseman that can play on the right side. There have been rumblings about interest in a few players, including two New York Islanders players: Bo Horvat and Matthew Barzal.
thehockeynews.com1970Died in Melbourne on 31 July Kent Hughes enlisted in the AIF and left Australia with the Australian Light Horse for the Middle East (Sinai, Palestine, Syria and Gallipoli) on 18 October 1914. At the end of the War, he went to Oxford to take up the Rhodes scholarship that had been awarded to him in 1915. In 1940 he enlisted in the AIF and served in Singapore and Malaya. In February 1942 Kent Hughes was taken prisoner and was sent to POW camps in Singapore, Formosa and Manchuria.
nla.gov.auSir Wilfrid Selwyn Kent Hughes KBE, MVO, MC (12 June 1895 – 31 July 1970) was an Australian soldier, Olympian and Olympic Games organiser, author and federal and state government minister. Kent Hughes was born in Melbourne to an upper middle-class family. He was set to attend the University of Oxford on a Rhodes Scholarship when he enlisted in the army on the outbreak of World War I. After his discharge from the army, Kent Hughes attended Oxford and represented Australia in athletics as a...
military-history.fandom.com