Thomas Glassey

Thomas Glassey
Senator for Queensland
In office
30 March 1901 – 31 December 1903
Personal details
Born 26 February 1844(1844-02-26)
Armagh, Ireland
Died 28 September 1936(1936-09-28) (aged 92)
Nationality Irish Australian
Political party Protectionist Party
Occupation Miner

Thomas Glassey (26 February 1844 – 28 September 1936) was an Irish-born Australian politician. Born in County Armagh, he received no formal education, working as a mill-worker and miner in Scotland and England. He migreated to Australia around 1885, when he became a miner at Bundamba, and was Secretary of the Bundamba Miners Association. He was a founding member of the Australian Labor Party in Queensland, and was the first Labor member of any Australian parliament when he was elected to the Queensland Legislative Assembly in 1889 as the member for Bundamba. Defeated in 1893, he was subsequently member for Burke from 1894 to 1896 and Bundaberg from 1896 to 1900. He left the Labor Party in 1899 over the party's socialist objective. In 1901, he was elected to the Australian Senate for Queensland, unofficially as a Protectionist (though there was no protectionist organisation in Queensland at the time). In 1903, the National Liberal Union endorsed non-Labor candidates, and Glassey, as a Deakinite, did not receive endorsement. He contested the Senate as an independent protectionist and received 25.6% of the vote, but was not elected. Glassey died in 1936.[1]

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References

  1. ^ Carr, Adam (2008). "Australian Election Archive". Psephos, Adam Carr's Election Archive. http://psephos.adam-carr.net/countries/a/australia. Retrieved 2008-11-16. 

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