Con O'Brien (politician)
Joseph Thomson | |
---|---|
Succeeded by | Henry Carson |
Constituency | Central Province |
Personal details | |
Born | Labor | 20 April 1866
Bartholomew Cornelius "Con" O'Brien (20 April 1866 – 11 December 1938) was an Australian politician who served as a
O'Brien was born in
O'Brien was elected to the Cue Municipal Council in 1896, and from 1897 to 1900 served as mayor.[1] He was elected to parliament at a 1901 Legislative Council by-election for Central Province, caused by the resignation of Frederic Whitcombe.[2]
His candidacy was supported by the Amalgamated Workers' Association (a forerunner of the Australian Workers' Union),[3] and he subsequently joined the parliamentary Labor Party, becoming one of its first members in the Legislative Council. O'Brien lost his seat at the 1904 elections.
He regained his seat in 1908, replacing the retiring
He left parliament in 1914, at the end of his six-year term, and returned to the hotel trade, running the Court Hotel in Perth (which he had acquired in 1906).[1] A prominent member of the Irish community in Perth and a leader of the annual Saint Patrick's Day, he died at his hotel in December 1938, aged 72.[5]
References
- ^ a b Bartholomew Cornelius (Con) O'Brien – Biographical Register of Members of the Parliament of Western Australia. Retrieved 28 May 2016.
- ^ "The Central Province Election.", Murchison Advocate, 2 February 1901.
- ^ "Reception to Mr. B. C. O'Brien, M.L.C.", Murchison Advocate, 16 February 1901.
- ^ "Central Province Election". Black Range Courier and Sandstone Observer. 22 May 1908. Retrieved 12 November 2023.
- ^ "MR. CON O'BRIEN DIES", The Daily News (Perth), 12 December 1938.