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| image = File:Thomas Bavister photograph 1891 Labor Party MPs.jpg

| image = File:Thomas Bavister photograph 1891 Labor Party MPs.jpg

| alt =

| alt =

| office1 = Member for Forbes (NSW Legislative Assembly)

| office1 = Member for (NSW Legislative Assembly)

| term_start1 = 24 June 1891

| term_start1 = June 1891

| term_end1 = 25 June 1894

| term_end1 = 25 June 1894

| office2 = Member for Ashfield (NSW Legislative Assembly)

| term_start2 = 17 June 1894

| term_end2 = 5 June 1895

| office3 = Member for Ashfield (NSW Legislative Assembly)

| term_start3 = 24 July 1895

| term_end3 = 8 July 1898

|birth_date = 7 February 1844

|birth_date = 7 February 1844

|birth_place = [[Canterbury, Victoria]]

|birth_place = [[Canterbury, Victoria]]


Revision as of 20:17, 20 December 2025

Australian politician

Thomas Bavister

In office
17 June 1891 – 25 June 1894
In office
17 June 1894 – 5 June 1895
In office
24 July 1895 – 8 July 1898
Born 7 February 1844
Died 2 January 1923(1923-01-02) (aged 73)
Spouse Harriet Green
Parents
  • Joseph Bavister (father)
  • Kesiah (née Langley) (mother)

Thomas Bavister (1850 – 2 January 1923) was an English-born Australian politician.

Biography

Early years

Thomas Bavister was born in Sheffield in Yorkshire to platelayer Joseph Bavister and Kesiah (née Langley), and moved to Bedfordshire at a young age. He received a primary education, but left school at fourteen to become an apprentice bricklayer.

Sheffield

He returned to Sheffield in 1871 and became involved in the local bricklayers’ union. On 3 September 1873 he married Harriet Green.

Sydney

In 1883 he migrated to Sydney, where he was soon involved in the United Operative Bricklayers’ Society of New South Wales, serving as a delegate on the Trades and Labor Council from 1889 to 1890.

Political career

In 1891 he was elected to the New South Wales Legislative Assembly as the Labor member for Canterbury. By 1894, when he moved to the seat of Ashfield, he had become a Free Trader, having refused to sign the pledge enforcing a binding vote in 1893. Defeated in 1898, he was subsequently a delegate of the Sydney Labor Council from 1900 to 1908.

Later years

Bavister died at Kogarah in 1923.[1]

References

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