The Honourable Frederick Baglin |
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Member of the Legislative Council of Western Australia |
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In office 22 May 1920 – 13 August 1923 |
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Preceded by | Joseph Allen |
Succeeded by | Edmund Gray |
Constituency | West Province |
Personal details | |
Born | 18 May 1872 Moutajup, Victoria, Australia |
Died | unknown (after 1952) |
Political party | Labor |
Frederick Arthur Baglin (18 May 1872 – ?) was an Australian politician who was a Labor Party member of the Legislative Council of Western Australia from 1920 to 1923, representing West Province. He resigned his seat after being charged with theft, and subsequently served time in prison.
Baglin was born in Mountajup, Victoria (near Hamilton), to Caroline (née Walters) and Samuel Baglin. He is first recorded as living in Western Australia in 1900, when he was a resident of Paddington (on the Eastern Goldfields and worked as a Western Australian Government Railways contractor. Baglin later worked for periods farming near Southern Cross and as a butcher in Kalgoorlie. He was elected to the Kalgoorlie Roads Board in 1912, but was unable to take his place due to a technicality. In 1915, Baglin moved to Fremantle, where was elected secretary of the local trades hall two years later.
In 1916, Baglin was preselected as the Labor candidate for the Legislative Council's West Province. He was defeated by only 15 votes, despite his Liberal opponent, Sir Henry Briggs, being the sitting President of the Legislative Council. At the 1918 Legislative Council elections, Baglin repeated his candidacy, running against another sitting member, the Nationalist Party's Robert Lynn. He was defeated a second time, losing with 48.3 percent of the vote, but succeeded on his third attempt, against Joseph Allen in 1920.