Forester Augustus Obeyesekere Explained

Forester Augustus Obeyesekere
Honorific-Suffix:MSC
Order:2nd Speaker of the State Council
Term Start:11 December 1934
Term End:7 December 1935
Predecessor:Alfred Francis Molamure
Successor:Waithilingam Duraiswamy
Nationality:Ceylonese (Sri Lankan)
Residence:Balcombe House, Cotta road
Alma Mater:Royal College, Colombo

Forester Augustus Obeyesekere (7 August 1880 – 26 December 1961) was a prominent colonial era legislator from Ceylon. He was the Speaker of the State Council of Ceylon and a member of the Legislative Council of Ceylon.[1] [2]

Born to Sir Solomon Christoffel Obeyesekere[3] a member of the Legislative Council, F A Obeysekera was educated at Royal College, Colombo, where he captained the cricket team at the Royal-Thomian and played for the Singhalese Sports Club.[4] [5] He later studied at Cambridge University.[6]

He was elected an unofficial member from the Southern Province Central (Matara) to the Legislative Council in the 1924 Legislative Council election and retained his seat till the Legislative Council was dissolved and replaced by the State Council in the 1931 State Council election, when he was elected as deputy speaker. In 1934, he became Speaker when Sir Francis Molamure stepped down for personal reasons.[7]

He married Amy Isabel Sykes and they had two children, Boykin and Ezlynne. Ezlynne married Ralph Deraniyagala, MBE who became the Clerk of Parliament.

See also

Notes and References

  1. http://www.island.lk/2008/09/26/features3.html S. W. R. D. Bandaranaike- trail-blazing leader
  2. https://archive.today/20070422220652/http://www.themorningleader.lk/20070418/letters.html Anil Obeysekera
  3. http://www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~lkawgw/gen1006.html SCHARFF - Family #1006
  4. Web site: MY SCHOOL DAY IMPRESSIONS, By Frank Ondatjie . 2009-08-05 . 2008-05-17 . https://web.archive.org/web/20080517053558/http://www.royalthomian.info/HTML/articles_pages/100th/12.html . dead .
  5. http://archives.dailynews.lk/2004/03/10/fea10.html The Royal Thomian derby by Renu Manamendra
  6. Wisden 1963, p. 1035.
  7. Web site: Speakers . parliament.lk . Parliament of Sri Lanka . 7 January 2022.