Members of the Queensland Legislative Assembly, 1915–1918
This is a list of members of the 20th Legislative Assembly of Queensland from 1915 to 1918, as elected at the 1915 state election held on 22 May 1915.[1]
The election was a landslide for the Labor Party, with the previous premier Digby Denham and many of the Denham Ministry losing their parliamentary seats.
Unlike in most other states at this time, the Labor Party in Queensland did not split over the conscription issue; however, the former Liberal and Farmers Union members largely joined the Nationalist Party of Australia.
Name | Party | Electorate | Term in office |
---|---|---|---|
John Adamson[4] | Labor/Independent | Rockhampton | 1907–1909; 1911–1917 |
John Appel | Farmers' Union | Albert | 1908–1929 |
Thomas Armfield | Labor | Musgrave | 1915–1920 |
William Armstrong | Liberal | Lockyer | 1893–1904; 1907–1918 |
George Barber | Labor | Bundaberg | 1901–1935 |
George Barnes | Liberal | Warwick | 1908–1935 |
Percy Bayley | Farmers' Union | Pittsworth | 1915–1920 |
William Bebbington | Farmers' Union | Drayton | 1912–1923 |
Ernest Bell | Liberal | Fassifern | 1913–1930 |
William Bertram | Labor | Maree | 1912–1929 |
Charles Booker | Liberal | Wide Bay | 1909–1918 |
David Bowman[2] | Labor | Fortitude Valley | 1899–1902; 1904–1916 |
Thomas Bridges | Liberal | Nundah | 1896–1907; 1909–1918 |
George Carter | Labor | Port Curtis | 1915–1920, 1923–1929 |
Charles Collins | Labor | Bowen | 1909–1912, 1915–1936 |
Frank Cooper | Labor | Bremer | 1915–1946 |
Bernard Corser | Liberal | Burnett | 1912–1928 |
Harry Coyne | Labor | Warrego | 1908–1923 |
Thomas Dunstan | Labor | Gympie | 1915–1929, 1935–1953 |
Hon John Fihelly | Labor | Paddington | 1912–1922 |
Thomas Foley | Labor | Mundingburra | 1909–1920 |
Frank Forde[4] | Labor | Rockhampton | 1917–1922, 1955–1957 |
James Forsythe | Liberal | Murrumba | 1899–1907; 1909–1918 |
Edgar Free | Labor | South Brisbane | 1915–1920 |
John Gilday | Labor | Ithaca | 1912–1926 |
William Gillies | Labor | Eacham | 1912–1925 |
David Gledson | Labor | Ipswich | 1915–1929, 1932–1949 |
Francis Grayson | Liberal/Independent | Cunningham | 1904–1920 |
Donald Gunn | Liberal | Carnarvon | 1907–1920 |
William Hamilton[1] | Labour | Gregory | 1899–1915 |
Herbert Hardacre | Labour | Leichhardt | 1893–1919 |
Harry Hartley | Labor | Fitzroy | 1915–1929 |
William Hartley | Labor | Kurilpa | 1915–1918 |
Robert Hodge | Farmers' Union | Nanango | 1902–1904; 1909–1920 |
John McEwan Hunter | Labor | Maranoa | 1907–1919 |
John Huxham | Labor | Buranda | 1908–1909, 1912–1924 |
Alfred Jones[3] | Labor | Maryborough | 1904–1909, 1915–1917, 1922–1932 |
Thomas Llewellyn Jones | Labor | Oxley | 1915–1918 |
Mick Kirwan | Labor | Brisbane | 1912–1932 |
Edward Land | Labor | Balonne | 1904–1927 |
William Lloyd | Labor | Enoggera | 1915–1920, 1923–1929 |
James Larcombe | Labor | Keppel | 1912–1929, 1932–1956 |
William Lennon | Labor | Herbert | 1907–1920 |
Edward Macartney | Liberal | Toowong | 1900–1908; 1909–1920 |
Hon William McCormack | Labor | Cairns | 1912–1930 |
Peter McLachlan | Labor | Merthyr | 1908–1912, 1915–1920, 1923–1929 |
Hugh McMinn | Labor | Bulimba | 1915–1918 |
Herbert McPhail | Labor | Windsor | 1915–1918 |
John May[5] | Labor | Flinders | 1907–1917 |
Arthur Moore | Farmers' Union | Aubigny | 1915–1941 |
Godfrey Morgan | Farmers' Union | Murilla | 1909–1938 |
William Murphy | Independent | Burke | 1904–1907; 1908–1918 |
James O'Sullivan | Labor | Kennedy | 1909–1920 |
John Payne | Labor | Mitchell | 1905–1928 |
Jens Peterson | Labor | Normanby | 1915–1935 |
Andrew Lang Petrie | Liberal | Toombul | 1893–1926 |
George Pollock[1] | Labor | Gregory | 1915–1939 |
Colin Rankin | Liberal | Burrum | 1905–1918 |
Robert Roberts | Liberal | East Toowoomba | 1907–1934 |
Daniel Ryan | Labor | Townsville | 1915–1920 |
Henry Ryan | Labor | Cook | 1915–1929 |
Hon T. J. Ryan | Labor | Barcoo | 1909–1919 |
William Forgan Smith | Labor | Mackay | 1915–1942 |
Henry Plantagenet Somerset | Liberal | Stanley | 1904–1920 |
Harry Stevens | Liberal | Rosewood | 1911–1918 |
James Stodart | Liberal | Logan | 1896–1918 |
James Stopford | Labor | Mount Morgan | 1915–1936 |
Edward Swayne | Liberal | Mirani | 1907–1935 |
Hon Ted Theodore | Labor | Chillagoe | 1909–1925 |
James Tolmie | Liberal | Toowoomba | 1901–1907; 1909–1918 |
William Vowles | Liberal | Dalby | 1911–1926 |
Harry Walker | Liberal | Cooroora | 1907–1947 |
David Weir[3] | Labor | Maryborough | 1917–1929 |
William Wellington | Labor | Charters Towers | 1915–1939 |
Thomas Wilson[2] | Labor | Fortitude Valley | 1916–1933 |
Vern Winstanley | Labor | Queenton | 1908–1932 |
- 1 On 10 July 1915, William Hamilton, the Labor member for Gregory, was appointed to the Queensland Legislative Council. Labor candidate George Pollock was elected unopposed at the resulting by-election on 18 August 1915.
- 2 On 25 February 1916, David Bowman, the Labor member for Fortitude Valley, died. Labor candidate Thomas Wilson won the resulting by-election on 1 April 1916.
- 3 On 15 February 1917, Alfred Jones, the Labor member for Maryborough, was appointed to the Legislative Council. Labor candidate David Weir won the resulting by-election on 31 March 1917.
- 4 John Adamson, the member for Rockhampton, left the Labor Party in 1916 and from then on, sat as an Independent. On 21 March 1917, he resigned to contest an Australian Senate seat for Queensland at the 1917 federal election as an Independent Nationalist. Labor candidate Frank Forde won the resulting by-election on 12 May 1917.
- 5 On 29 December 1917, John May, the Labor member for Flinders, died. No by-election was held due to the proximity of the 1918 state election.
References
- ↑ "Queensland General Election Dates 1860-1929" (PDF). Queensland Parliament. Retrieved 16 December 2013.
- Waterson, Duncan Bruce: Biographical Register of the Queensland Parliament 1860-1929 (second edition), Sydney 2001.
See also
- Queensland state election, 1915
- Ryan Ministry (Labor) (1915–1919)
Preceded by 19th Assembly |
20th Queensland Legislative Assembly 1915–1918 |
Succeeded by 21st Assembly |
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/18/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.