Jeremiah Joseph Stable (1883–1953) was the first Professor of English at the University of Queensland in Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.
Jeremiah Joseph Stable was born on 14 May 1883 in Willaston (near Gawler), South Australia, the son of Benjamin Stable and his wife Mary Ann (née O'Connell). His parents moved to Europe when he was four years old and he was educated in Switzerland until the age of 18. In 1902 he entered Cambridge University where he obtained an honours degree in medieval and modern languages, specialising in English literature. Between 1905 and 1908, he taught at the Commercial University of Cologne in Germany, while studying English and German philosophy at the Bonn University.
In 1912, Stable was appointed as a lecturer in modern languages at the University of Queensland.
In 1914 Stable undertook an extensive tour of northern Queensland with T.E. Jones, the newly appointed University press officer.
During World War I, Stable joined the Australian Army and became an official censor. In 1917, a national referendum was held to allow conscription into military service; the Australian Prime Minister Billy Hughes was strongly in favour of conscription. On 22 November 1917, the Queensland Premier T. J. Ryan made a strong speech in the Queensland Parliament against conscription. In the normal course of events, this speech would be reported in Hansard. However, on 27 November 1917, Stable received a hand-written message from Billy Hughes ordering him, as censor, to take possession of all printed copies of Hansard under the censorship provisions of the War Precautions Act. Stable went to the Queensland Government Printing Office, but was prevented from entering by the Queensland Police (who were apparently ordered to prevent his access by Premier Ryan). Stable then went to the Victoria Barracks where he obtained a troop of Australian soldiers, and returned with them to the printing office. On this occasion, the police allowed him to enter. Then with the assistance of the Queensland Government Printer, all but 3 copies of the Hansard were destroyed. Only the copy retained by Stable himself is known to have survived, having been found amongst his garden tools after Stable and his wife had died; it is held by the State Library of Queensland. Another copy had been donated to the National Library of Australia but it has since vanished. The fate of the third copy is unknown.