Alfred Richard Outtrim (1845 – 1925) was a long-serving Victorian politician who gained a reputation as a competent government minister and a promoter of women's suffrage and regional development.
Joining with Labor, Outtrim successfully recontested Maryborough in 1904 and then served an additional seven terms to 1920 ending his political career as the father of the house.
With the split in Labor over conscription Outtrim sided with Prime Minister Billy Hughes and became a Nationalist from 1916.
As a young man, Outtrim became manager of the Maryborough branch of Cobb and Co, worked as a wine and spirit merchant and, with a brother, purchased the carrying business of McCulloch & Company.
By 1885, Outtrim was an auctioneer, general commission agent, district auditor, legal manager, and director of local gold-mining companies.
Outtrim introduced the 1896 and 1898 referendum bills against the Victorian Upper House which prompted Sir Alexander Peacock to describe him as a radical politician.
Outtrim was defeated in Maryborough by Labor candidate George Clement Frost in the 1920 Victorian state election.
For his commemoration his family donated a set of stained-glass windows to Christ Church, where he had been a regular attender and where he and Jane had married 54 years before.