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William Henry Moule who had a
varied and distinguished career in politics, sport and law was born on 31
January 1858 the son of Frederick Moule (q.v.) and Julia née
Man. Educated at Melbourne Boys’ Grammar School (1866-75) and later
Melbourne University (LL.B., 1879) he was admitted to the Bar in 1879
and began practising the following year with “Vaughan, Moule and Seddon”;
his most celebrated proceeding was known as the “Buckley will case” (1882).
He was later called to the Bench as a County Court judge (1907-35)
specialising in insolvency cases; The Age wrote of Moule as a judge
that “he had a genial disposition, and though the hardened criminal had
reason to fear his caustic comments with the sentence to follow, first
offenders were treated with leniency and kindly advice”. Described as a
“fiery young advocate with strong political ambitions”, he sensationally
defeated (Sir) Thomas Bent
(q.v.) (“Bent, not broken”) in the local seat of Brighton (1894-1900) 1,579
votes to 925 as a
free-trader believing that the “commerce of the community has been strangled
by protection” and later chaired royal commissions on law reform (1897)
and factories and shops law (1900).
“When Moule appeared in
Brighton first,
The story to him
went,
That he would but his boiler
burst
In steaming against
Bent.
The undertaker, they
declared,
Could only Tommy
fight;
But Moule took up the ball,
prepared
To bowl instead of
SLEIGHT
The figures up, a mighty
laugh
The gladdened
heavens rent,
And then they wrote Moule’s
epitaph -
“THE MAN WHO PUT OUT BENT”.
In cricket
Moule played nine first-class matches between 1879 and 1885 for Victoria
including the first Victorian team to defeat a touring English side (Feb
1879). He went on to play for Australia with William Murdoch’s (1854-1911)
touring side of 1880 in a team that included the legendary Frederick ‘Demon’
Spofforth (1853-1926); in the only test played at The Oval (Sep 1880) won by
the England he took three wickets for 23 runs and with the bat put on a last
wicket stand of 88 with Murdoch scoring 34 runs. At the time of his death
he was the last surviving member of that team. In April 1935 Moule
retired from the Bench due to ill-health (“having had the largest term of
any County Court judge”) and died on 24 August 1939 survived by his wife
Jessie née Osborne (1864-1958; Brighton Cemetery) whom he married
in 1885; a son (Humphrey) Osborne Moule (4th Australian Light Horse) was killed at Lone
Pine on 6 August 1915. He resided at Clarence House - 83 Queens
Road, St. Kilda. In 1876 while at University, Moule joined the exclusive
The Bohemian’s club (1875-1931) becoming the longest serving member at its
dissolution on 31 December 1931; with the motto “obsolescent and inelegant”
cricket was the main test of qualification (Rule 7 - “the entrance fee be
nil and that the subscription do not exceed the entrance fee”). |