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Thomas Bath

The Honourable
Thomas Bath
CBE
Thomas Bath.jpg
Leader of the Opposition of Western Australia
In office
27 October 1906 – 3 August 1910
Premier Newton Moore
Preceded by William Johnson
Succeeded by John Scaddan
Minister for Education of Western Australia
In office
7 June 1905 – 25 August 1905
Premier Henry Daglish
Preceded by Henry Daglish
Succeeded by Walter Kingsmill
Member of the Western Australian Parliament
for Hannans
In office
1902–1904
Preceded by John Reside
Succeeded by Wallace Nelson
Member of the Western Australian Parliament
for Brown Hill
In office
1904–1911
Preceded by Constituency established
Succeeded by Constituency abolished
Member of the Western Australian Parliament
for Avon
In office
1911–1914
Preceded by Constituency established
Succeeded by Tom Harrison
Personal details
Born (1875-02-21)21 February 1875
Hill End, New South Wales
Died 6 November 1956(1956-11-06) (aged 81)
Mount Lawley, Western Australia, Australia
Political party Australian Labor Party

Thomas Henry Bath, CBE (21 February 1875 – 6 November 1956) was an Australian politician, trade unionist, newspaper editor, writer, and cooperativist. A member of the Australian Labor Party, he served as a Member of the Western Australian Legislative Assembly between 1902 and 1914 for the constituencies of Hannans, Brown Hill and Avon, and was also Minister for Education for a period of 79 days in 1905, and Leader of the Opposition between 1906 and 1910. In later life, Bath was involved in the establishment of the University of Western Australia, and also initiated several agricultural cooperatives.

Bath was born to Thomas Henry Richard Bath, a miner, and his wife Sarah Ann Bath (née Barrow), on 21 February 1875, at Hill End, New South Wales, a mining town in the Blue Mountains. He emigrated to the Western Australian Goldfields in 1896, and found work as a miner. The following year, after a brief sojourn in New South Wales, Bath was involved in founding the Amalgamated Workers' Association. In 1898, he was asked to head the local chapter of the Knights of Labor, a United-States-based labour organisation, which he represented at the 1899 trade union conference, held in Coolgardie. In September 1900, Bath, despite having no formal training in writing, became the first editor of the Westralian Worker, a socialist publication. In July of the following year, Bath gave way to Wallace Nelson.


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