Electoral district of Enoggera
Appearance
Enoggera was an electoral district of the Legislative Assembly in the Australian state of Queensland. It existed from 1873 to 1950 and centred on the suburb of Enoggera in Brisbane.[1]
The electorate was created by the Electoral Districts Act of 1872. From 1873 to 1878 it returned a single member. From 1878 to 1888 it became a dual member constituency (returning two members). From 1888 to 1950 it reverted to returning a single member.[1]
In 1950 an electoral redistribution resulted in the name being dropped with most of the electorate becoming the Electoral district of Kedron and the Electoral district of Mount Coot-tha.[1]
Members for Enoggera
The members representing the electoral district of Enoggera are listed below.[2] [1]
Member | Party | Term |
---|---|---|
James Dickson | Ministerialist | 28 November 1873 - 21 November 1878 |
Member | Party | Term | Member | Party | Term |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
James Dickson | Ministerialist | 21 November 1878 - 12 May 1888 | Arthur Rutledge | Ministerialist | 21 November 1878 - 18 August 1883 |
John Bale | 18 August 1883 - 13 October 1885 | ||||
Robert Bulcock | 26 October 1885 - 12 May 1888 |
Member | Party | Term |
---|---|---|
James Drake | Opposition | 12 May 1888 - 7 December 1899 |
Matthew Reid | Australian Labor Party | 23 December 1899 - 11 March 1902 |
Arthur Hawthorn | Ministerialist | 11 March 1902 - 7 February 1911 |
Richard Trout | Ministerialist | 25 February 1911 - 22 May 1915 |
William Lloyd | Australian Labor Party | 22 May 1915 - 9 October 1920 |
James Kerr | Nationalist, United, Country/National | 9 October 1920 - 11 June 1932 |
George Taylor | Australian Labor Party, Independent Labor | 11 June 1932 - 15 April 1944 |
Kenneth Morris | Qld People's Party | 15 April 1944 - 29 April 1950 |
See also
- Electoral districts of Queensland
- Members of the Queensland Legislative Assembly by year
- Category:Members of the Queensland Legislative Assembly by name
References
- ^ a b c d "Representatives of Queensland State Electorates 1860 - 2010" (PDF). Queensland Parliament. Retrieved 31 December 2012.
- ^ "Former Members Register". Queensland Parliament. Retrieved 31 December 2012.