Joseph Cookworthy (1828 – 21 February 1909) was a settler of Western Australia. He arrived in the colony in 1873, having previously been an army officer and civil servant in India. Cookworthy served in the Legislative Assembly of Western Australia from 1890 until 1897, representing the seat of Sussex.
While in parliament, Cookworthy was twice responsible (in 1893 and 1896) for introducing legislation that would have allowed women to vote in colonial elections for the first time (although only unmarried women meeting the property qualification would gain this right). His attempts were unsuccessful, in part due to the opposition of Sir John Forrest (the premier), although Forrest reversed his position a few years later and women's suffrage became law in 1899.[3] Cookworthy died in Busselton in February 1909, aged 81. His sister, Mary Frances, married Thomas Webster, a prominent English barrister, and was the step-mother of Richard Webster, 1st Viscount Alverstone.[4]
^ abJoseph Cookworthy – Biographical Register of Members of the Parliament of Western Australia. Retrieved 5 June 2016.
^Black, David; Prescott, Valerie (1997). Election statistics : Legislative Assembly of Western Australia, 1890-1996. Perth, [W.A.]: Western Australian Parliamentary History Project and Western Australian Electoral Commission. ISBN0730984095.
^Phillips, Harry (1991). "The Modern Parliament, 1965–1989". In Black, David (ed.). The House on the Hill: A History of the Parliament of Western Australia 1832–1990. Perth, Western Australia: Parliament of Western Australia. pp. 70–71. ISBN0-7309-3983-9.