Anthony Ogden | |
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Member of the Queensland Legislative Assembly for Townsville |
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In office 20 January 1894 – 21 March 1896 Serving with Robert Philp |
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Preceded by | George Burns |
Succeeded by | William Castling |
Personal details | |
Born |
Anthony Ogden 18 March 1866 Grenoside, Yorkshire, England |
Died | 15 May 1943 Townsville, Queensland, Australia |
(aged 77)
Resting place | West End Cemetery |
Political party | Labour Party |
Spouse(s) | Mary Ann Gillott (m.1888 d.1920) |
Occupation | Meatworker |
Religion | Wesleyan |
Anthony Ogden (18 March 1866 - 15 May 1943) was a member of the Queensland Legislative Assembly.
Ogden was born in Grenoside, Yorkshire, the son of Anthony Ogden Snr. and his wife Ann (née Housley) and was educated in Sheffield. On leaving school he was an apprentice iron moulder before arriving in Queensland in 1884. He was a meatworker and later worked in a foundry and on the wharves of Townsville. He studied for the Wesleyan Church and at one stage was a local preacher.
On the 19th November 1888 he married Mary Ann Gillott (died 1920) and together had two sons and five daughters. Ogden died at Townsville in May 1943 and was buried in the West End Cemetery.
Having lost the 1893 Queensland colonial election by one vote, Ogden won the 1894 by-election for the seat of Townsville in the Queensland Legislative Assembly, defeating his Ministerialist opponent, Mr Willmett. He was the first candidate in Queensland to run on an official Labour Party platform. He was defeated two years later at the 1896 Queensland colonial election by the two Ministerial candidates, Robert Philp and William Castling.
He was a long-term alderman on the Townsville City Council and in 1924 he became the city's mayor, holding the role until 1926. He was the secretary of the Meatworker's Union and the Watersiders' Federation of Australia. A prohibitionist, he was also the editor of Townsville Clarion.