Thomas Pascoe (23 June 1859 – 23 February 1939) was a wheat grower and politician in South Australia.
His father, who arrived in South Australia on the Abberton from Crowan, Cornwall in 1848 with his parents and siblings, worked at the Burra mines, married at Penwortham in 1852, made several valuable finds at the Forest Creek gold diggings and established Angle Farm at White Hut and another at Terowie.
[2] Thomas Pascoe, Jr., who may have been educated at Stanley Grammar School, Watervale, and took over management of the Terowie farm (his brother Paul Roach Pascoe ran the White Hut farm) and became a considerable authority on wheat growing.
[3] He held several Ministerial positions, and for a short time was Acting Premier when Sir Henry Barwell visited Melbourne in 1923.
He married Florence Eliza Rayner (died 4 October 1953) of Canowie on 28 July 1886.