Members of the Queensland Legislative Assembly, 1883–1888
Appearance
This is a list of members of the 9th Legislative Assembly of Queensland from 1883 to 1888, as elected at the 1883 colonial elections held between 10 August 1883 and 30 October 1883 (due to problems of distance and communications, it was not possible to hold the elections on a single day).[1]
Name | Party | Electorate | Term in office |
---|---|---|---|
Walter Adams[11] | Ministerial | Mulgrave | 1886–1892 |
Robert Aland | Opposition | Drayton and Toowoomba | 1881–1893 |
William Allan[14] | Opposition | Darling Downs | 1881–1883; 1887–1896 |
John Annear[4] | Ministerial | Maryborough | 1884–1902 |
Archibald Archer[9] | Independent | Blackall | 1867–1869; 1878–1886; 1888–1896 |
William Bailey | Ministerial | Wide Bay | 1873–1888 |
John Lloyd Bale[7] | Ministerial | Enoggera | 1883–1885 |
Frank Beattie[10] | Ministerial | Fortitude Valley | 1874–1878; 1879–1886 |
Maurice Hume Black | Opposition | Mackay | 1881–1993 |
William Brookes | Ministerial | North Brisbane | 1863–1867; 1882–1888 |
Samuel Brooks[10] | Ministerial | Fortitude Valley | 1886–1888 |
William Villiers Brown[8] | Independent | Townsville | 1885–1888; 1891–1893 |
John Buckland | Ministerial | Bulimba | 1882–1892 |
Robert Bulcock[7] | Ministerial | Enoggera | 1885–1888 |
James Campbell[2] | Opposition | Aubigny | 1884–1893 |
Thomas Campbell[3][6] | Independent | Cook | 1884–1885 |
Charles Chubb | Opposition | Bowen | 1883–1888 |
Frederick Cooper[3] | Independent | Cook | 1878–1884 |
James Crombie | Opposition | Mitchell | 1888–1898 |
James Dickson | Ministerial/Independent | Enoggera | 1873–1888; 1892–1901 |
John Donaldson | Opposition | Warrego | 1883–1893; 1896 |
Hon Charles Dutton[1] | Ministerial | Leichhardt | 1883–1888 |
John Ferguson | Ministerial | Rockhampton | 1881–1888 |
James Foote | Ministerial | Bundamba | 1873–1878; 1880–1888; 1892–1893 |
Justin Foxton | Ministerial | Carnarvon | 1883–1904 |
Simon Fraser | Ministerial | South Brisbane | 1868–1870; 1873–1878; 1880–1888 |
James Garrick[1] | Ministerial | Moreton | 1867–1868; 1877–1883 |
John Govett | Opposition | Mitchell | 1882–1888 |
Samuel Griffith | Ministerial | North Brisbane | 1872–1893 |
Samuel Grimes | Ministerial | Oxley | 1878–1902 |
William Henry Groom | Ministerial | Drayton and Toowoomba | 1862–1901 |
John Hamilton | Opposition | Cook | 1878–1904 |
William Higson | Ministerial | Rockhampton | 1883–1888 |
Charles Lumley Hill[6] | Independent | Cook | 1878–1882, 1885–1888 |
Jacob Horwitz[12] | Ministerial | Warwick | 1878–1887 |
John Hurley[4] | Independent | Maryborough | 1883–1884 |
Jean-Baptiste Isambert | Ministerial | Rosewood | 1882–1892 |
John Jessop | Opposition | Dalby | 1882–1893 |
Henry Jordan | Ministerial | South Brisbane | 1860; 1868–1871; 1883–1890 |
Francis Kates | Ministerial | Darling Downs | 1878–1881; 1883–1888 |
William Kellett | Ministerial | Stanley | 1878–1888 |
James Lalor | Opposition | Maranoa | 1878–1888 |
Isidor Lissner | Opposition | Kennedy | 1883–1893; 1896–1899 |
Thomas MacDonald-Paterson[1][5] | Ministerial | Moreton | 1878–1885; 1896–1901 |
John MacFarlane | Ministerial | Ipswich | 1878–1894 |
Thomas McIlwraith[11] | Opposition | Mulgrave | 1870–1871; 1873–1886; 1888–1896 |
John McMaster[8] | Ministerial | Fortitude Valley | 1885–1899; 1901–1904; 1907–1908 |
Thomas McWhannell[15] | Ministerial | Gregory | 1882–1888 |
John Murtagh Macrossan | Opposition | Townsville | 1873–1878; 1879–1891 |
Matthew Mellor | Ministerial | Wide Bay | 1883–1893 |
Alfred Midgley[13] | Independent | Fassifern | 1883–1887 |
William Miles[14] | Ministerial | Darling Downs | 1864–1873; 1874–1875; 1876–1887 |
Boyd Dunlop Morehead | Opposition | Balonne | 1871–1880; 1883–1896 |
Berkeley Basil Moreton | Ministerial | Burnett | 1870–1871; 1873–1875; 1883–1888 |
Arthur Morgan[12] | Independent | Warwick | 1887–1896; 1898–1906 |
Frank Reid Murphy[8] | Opposition | Barcoo | 1885–1892 |
Hugh Nelson | Opposition | Northern Downs | 1883–1898 |
Albert Norton | Opposition | Port Curtis | 1878–1893 |
Edward Palmer | Opposition | Burke | 1883–1893 |
William Pattison[9] | Opposition | Blackall | 1886–1893 |
Patrick Perkins[2] | Opposition | Aubigny | 1877–1884; 1888–1893 |
Robert Philp[8] | Opposition | Musgrave | 1886–1915 |
Arthur Rutledge | Ministerial | Kennedy | 1878–1893; 1899–1904 |
William Salkeld | Ministerial | Ipswich | 1883–1893 |
John Scott | Opposition | Leichhardt | 1868, 1870–1888 |
Richard Bingham Sheridan | Ministerial | Maryborough | 1883–1888 |
William Smyth | Ministerial | Gympie | 1883–1899 |
Ernest James Stevens | Independent | Logan | 1878–1896 |
John Stevenson | Ministerial | Normanby | 1876–1893 |
George Thorn[13] | Independent | Fassifern | 1867–1874; 1876–1878; 1879–1883; 1887–1888; 1893–1902 |
Hiram Wakefield[5] | Ministerial | Moreton | 1885–1888 |
Donald Smith Wallace | Ministerial | Clermont | 1883–1888 |
Peter White | Independent | Stanley | 1883–1888 |
See also
- Premier:
- Samuel Griffith (Ministerial) (1883–1888)
Notes
- 1 The First Griffith Ministry was constituted on 13 November 1883. As a result, all new ministers had to resign their seats and contest them at ministerial by-elections; all except Charles Dutton, member for Leichhardt, were unopposed. Additionally, on the same day, James Garrick, the member for Moreton, was appointed to the Queensland Legislative Council. Thomas MacDonald-Paterson, who had lost his seat of Rockhampton at the election three months earlier, was elected unopposed for Moreton on 21 November 1883, whilst Dutton was re-elected on 7 December.
- 2 Following a petition alleging electoral fraud by Patrick Perkins or his supporters, on 21 February 1884, the Committee of Elections and Qualifications ruled the election of Patrick Perkins, the member for Aubigny, null and void. James Campbell was elected unopposed at the resulting by-election on 4 March 1884; although Perkins was able to contest the by-election, he decided not to do so.
- 3 On 4 March 1884, the Committee of Elections and Qualifications ruled Frederick Cooper, one of the members for Cook, was disqualified from sitting in the Legislative Assembly. Thomas Campbell, one of the unsuccessful candidates at the 1883 poll, was declared elected. The Brisbane Courier editorial on 27 February, anticipating a new election being called in Cook, said: "There was so much personation on both sides that a new election would be desirable, if it could be assumed that it would be conducted more free from abuse than its predecessor."
- 4 On 8 July 1884, John Hurley, the member for Maryborough, resigned after having been declared insolvent. John Annear won the resulting by-election on 25 July 1884.
- 5 On 22 April 1885, Thomas MacDonald-Paterson, the member for Moreton, was appointed to the Queensland Legislative Council. Hiram Wakefield won the resulting by-election on 13 May 1885.
- 6 On 4 August 1885, Thomas Campbell, the member for Cook, resigned after having been declared insolvent. Charles Lumley Hill won the resulting by-election on 16 September 1885.
- 7 On 13 October 1885, John Lloyd Bale, the member for Enoggera, resigned due to ill health. Robert Bulcock was elected unopposed at the resulting by-election on 26 October 1885.
- 8 The Additional Members Act 1885 created three new seats: Barcoo, Musgrave and an additional seat each in Townsville and Fortitude Valley. The following members were elected:
- Fortitude Valley (14 September 1885): John McMaster
- Townsville (11 November 1885): William Villiers Brown
- Barcoo (24 November 1885): Frank Reid Murphy
- Musgrave (5 January 1886): Robert Philp
- 9 On 23 January 1886, Archibald Archer, the member for Blackall, left for Europe on a prolonged visit, and resigned his seat. William Pattison won the resulting by-election on 13 April 1886.
- 10 On 16 April 1886, Frank Beattie, one of the members for Fortitude Valley, died. Samuel Brooks won the resulting by-election on 1 May 1886.
- 11 On 5 June 1886, Thomas McIlwraith, the member for Mulgrave, resigned. Walter Adams won the resulting by-election on 10 July 1886.
- 12 On 2 July 1887, Jacob Horwitz, the member for Warwick, resigned. Arthur Morgan was returned unopposed. won the resulting by-election on 18 July 1887.
- 13 On 19 July 1887, Alfred Midgley, the member for Fassifern, resigned. George Thorn, Jr. won the resulting by-election on 4 August 1887.
- 14 On 22 August 1887, William Miles, the member for Darling Downs, died. William Allan won the resulting by-election on 6 September 1887.
- 15 On 17 March 1888, Thomas McWhannell, the member for Gregory, died. No by-election was held due to the proximity of the 1888 election.
References
- ^ "Queensland General Election Dates 1860-1929" (PDF). Queensland Parliament. Archived from the original (PDF) on 16 December 2013. Retrieved 16 December 2013.
- Waterson, Duncan Bruce: Biographical Register of the Queensland Parliament 1860-1929 (second edition), Sydney 2001.
- Alphabetical Register of Members (Queensland Parliament)
- The General Election. List of Candidates Brisbane Courier, 26 April 1888, p. 6.