Nisha Rathode (Editor)

Oliver Badman

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Succeeded by
  
Philip McBride

Occupation
  
Farmer, preacher

Party
  
United Australia Party

Nationality
  
Australian

Died
  
April 24, 1977

Succeeded by
  
Edgar Russell

Role
  
Former Australian Senator

Preceded by
  
Philip McBride

Name
  
Oliver Badman


Oliver Badman

Born
  
18 December 1885 Yacka, South Australia (
1885-12-18
)

Political party
  
Country (1931–40) UAP (1940–43)

Previous offices
  
Member of the Australian Parliament (1937–1943), Australian Senator (1932–1937)

Albert Oliver Badman (18 December 1885 – 24 April 1977) was an Australian politician. Born in Yacka, South Australia, he was educated at state schools before becoming a wheat farmer and wheat breeder. He was a Methodist lay preacher and President of the South Australian Country Party before entering Parliament. In 1931, he was elected to the Australian Senate for South Australia, representing the Country Party. In 1937, Badman transferred to the House of Representatives, winning the seat of Grey. The United Australia Party (UAP) did not contest the seat as the Country Party had agreed to allow the UAP's sitting member for Grey, Philip McBride, to take Badman's place in the Senate. Together with fellow Country Party members Arthur Fadden, Bernard Corser and Thomas Collins, Badman dissociated himself from party leader Earle Page after the latter made attacks on the leader of the UAP, Robert Menzies; the exclusion of these four led to the election of Page supporter Archie Cameron as the party's next leader. In 1940, Cameron defected to the UAP, and the Country Party in South Australia ceased to exist; Badman became, in effect, a UAP member. He was defeated in 1943, and returned to farming. He was President of the Primary Producers' Union of South Australia from 1954 to 1961. Badman died in 1977.

Family

Albert Oliver Badman was born at Yacka on 18 December 1885 to Robert Badman and Agnes Mary nee Duffield. He married Ann White on 15 February 1911 at Yacka, South Australia, Australia and they had four sons: Ronald Hallam Badman (1911–2006), Wesley Oliver Badman (1913–1998), Lancel Collis Badman (1915–2012) and Sankey Roydon Badman (1918–2010).

References

Oliver Badman Wikipedia