Oswald Snowball

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Oswald Snowball
14th Speaker of the Victorian Legislative Assembly
In office
6 July 1927  16 March 1928
Preceded bySir John Bowser
Succeeded bySir Alexander Peacock
Member of the Victorian Legislative Assembly
for Brighton
In office
8 October 1909  16 March 1928
Preceded bySir Thomas Bent
Succeeded byIan Macfarlan
Personal details
BornOswald Robinson Snowball
(1859-07-18)18 July 1859
Died16 March 1928(1928-03-16) (aged 68)
Resting placeBrighton Cemetery
PartyNationalist
Other political
affiliations
Commonwealth Liberal Party
SpouseEllen Grace Anketell
University of Melbourne
ProfessionSolicitor

Oswald Robinson Snowball (18 July 1859 – 16 March 1928) was an English-born Australian politician.

Snowball was born in Wolsingham, England, and arrived in Australia in 1868 where his family spent three years on the land. He studied at Carlton College and the University of Melbourne where he qualified as a solicitor and was admitted to practice in 1883. He was a partner in the firms Briggs & Snowball and later Snowball & Kaufmann.[1]

Oswald served as Grand Master of the Victoria Orange Institution and Grand Orange Lodge of Australia.[2][3]

Snowball was elected to the Victorian parliament representing the Commonwealth Liberal Party in the seat of Brighton in a by-election on 8 October 1909. He was a prominent advocate of divorce law reform, in which he was supported by Rev. William Bottomley and the Melbourne Unitarian Church.[4] He served on various royal commissions, until he was voted Speaker of the Victorian Legislative Assembly at the commencement of the 29th Parliament on 6 July 1927. Snowball died in office on 16 March the next year.[1]

References

  1. "Oswald Robinson Snowball". Members of Parliament. Parliament of Victoria. Retrieved 22 July 2025.
  2. "Lodge Devotion 723 - Large List of Notable and Famous Australian Freemasons". www.lodgedevotion.net. Retrieved 29 June 2026.
  3. bgc_admin (28 July 2019). "Oswald Robinson Snowball (1859-1928)". Brighton General Cemetery. Retrieved 29 June 2026.
  4. Dorothy Scott (1980). The Halfway House to Infidelity. Unitarian Fellowship of Australia. p. 62. ISBN 0-95944601-X. "Infidelity" here refers to anti-Christians ("infidels"), rather than to those who break marriage vows.