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Born in
1821 at Surrey, England the son of Pierre Ogier, barrister and educated at
Eton College and later Trinity College, Cambridge. Called to the Bar in
1842 he then migrated to Victoria, arriving in early 1853. In December
1854, Ogier moved the Court for a writ of habeas corpus against three
prisoners convicted of setting fire to the Eureka Hotel during the volatile
period leading up to the Eureka Stockade; Ogier argued that “the Court had
no jurisdiction, and that the prisoners had not been tried by a jury of
their countrymen, in as much as they ought to have been tried by the Circuit
Court at Geelong, and not in Melbourne”. In 1870, Ogier was appointed a
police magistrate at Woods Point and St. Arnaud and was “vigorous in arguing
the State of Victoria’s right to the Riverina based on boundaries at the
proclamation of the colony”. A member of the Yorick Club, he died on 19
October 1913 from senile and heart failure aged 92 years and is buried in an
unmarked grave. |

Gravesite |
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Source:
Corfield, J, Wickham, D & Gervasoni, C., “The
Eureka Encyclopaedia” (2004).
De Serville, P., “Pounds and Pedigrees. The
Upper Class in Victoria 1850-80” (1991). |
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