Members of the Queensland Legislative Assembly, 1888–1893
This is a list of members of the 10th Legislative Assembly of Queensland from 1888 to 1893, as elected at the 1888 colonial election held between 28 April 1888 and 26 May 1888 (due to problems of distance and communications, it was not possible to hold the elections on a single day).[1]
The election was a decisive defeat for Samuel Griffith's Liberals, with Thomas McIlwraith's Conservatives becoming ascendant. During the term, a number of Liberals and Independents joined the Ministry, and by the end of the term, the terms "Ministerial" and "Opposition" were being used to describe members.
Name | Party | Electorate | Term in office |
---|---|---|---|
Walter Adams[8] | Conservative | Bundaberg | 1886–1892 |
George Agnew | Conservative | Nundah | 1888–1896 |
Robert Aland | Ind. Opp. | Drayton and Toowoomba | 1881–1893 |
William Allan | Conservative | Cunningham | 1881–1883; 1887–1896 |
John Annear | Liberal/Min. | Maryborough | 1884–1902 |
Archibald Archer | Independent | Rockhampton | 1867–1869; 1878–1886; 1888–1896 |
Andrew Henry Barlow | Liberal/Min. | Ipswich | 1888–1896 |
Matthew Battersby | Conservative | Moreton | 1888–1899 |
Maurice Hume Black | Conservative | Mackay | 1881–1993 |
William Villiers Brown[4] | Independent | Townsville | 1885–1888; 1891–1893 |
John Buckland[7] | Liberal/Opp. | Bulimba | 1882–1892 |
James John Cadell[5] | Independent | Burnett | 1891–1896 |
Albert Callan[1] | Independent | Fitzroy | 1889–1902 |
James Campbell | Conservative | Aubigny | 1884–1893 |
Richard Casey | Conservative | Warrego | 1888–1893 |
William Henry Corfield | Conservative | Gregory | 1888–1899 |
Alfred Cowley | Conservative | Herbert | 1888–1907 |
James Crombie | Conservative | Mitchell | 1888–1898 |
David Dalrymple | Independent/Min. | Mackay | 1888–1904 |
James Dickson[7] | Independent/Min. | Bulimba | 1873–1888; 1892–1901 |
John Donaldson | Ind. Opp. | Bulloo | 1883–1893; 1896 |
James Drake | Liberal/Opp. | Enoggera | 1888–1899 |
Robert Dunsmure | Conservative | Maranoa | 1888–1893 |
James Foote[9] | Liberal/Opp. | Rosewood | 1873–1878; 1880–1888; 1892–1893 |
Justin Foxton | Liberal/Min. | Carnarvon | 1883–1904 |
Michael Gannon | Ind. Opp. | Toombul | 1888–1893 |
Thomas Glassey | Labour | Bundamba | 1888–1893; 1894–1901 |
Louis Goldring | Ind. Opp. | Flinders | 1888–1893 |
Samuel Griffith | Liberal/Opp. | North Brisbane | 1872–1893 |
Samuel Grimes | Liberal/Min. | Oxley | 1878–1902 |
William Henry Groom | Liberal/Opp. | Drayton and Toowoomba | 1862–1901 |
George Hall[8] | Labour | Bundaberg | 1892–1893 |
John Hamilton | Conservative | Cook | 1878–1904 |
William Hodgkinson | Liberal/Opp. | Warrego | 1873–1875; 1888–1893 |
John Hoolan[2] | Labour | Burke | 1890–1894; 1896–1899 |
Ernest Hunter[2] | Liberal/Opp. | Burke | 1888–1890 |
Richard Hyne | Liberal/Opp. | Maryborough | 1888–1893 |
Jean-Baptiste Isambert[9] | Liberal/Opp. | Rosewood | 1882–1892 |
John Jessop | Ind. Opp. | Dalby | 1882–1893 |
George Hall Jones[5] | Conservative | Burnett | 1888–1891 |
Rees Jones | Conservative | North Rockhampton | 1888–1893 |
Hon Henry Jordan[3] | Liberal/Opp. | South Brisbane | 1860; 1868–1871; 1883–1890 |
Isidor Lissner | Conservative | Kennedy | 1883–1893; 1896–1899 |
William Little | Independent/Min. | Woothakata | 1888–1893 |
Abraham Luya | Conservative | South Brisbane | 1888–1893; 1899 |
Robert Lyons[1] | Conservative | Fitzroy | 1888–1889 |
John MacFarlane | Liberal/Min. | Ipswich | 1878–1894 |
Thomas McIlwraith | Conservative | North Brisbane | 1870–1871; 1873–1886; 1888–1896 |
John McMaster | Liberal/Min. | Fortitude Valley | 1885–1899; 1901–1904; 1907–1908 |
John Murtagh Macrossan[4] | Conservative | Townsville | 1873–1878; 1879–1891 |
Matthew Mellor | Liberal/Opp. | Gympie | 1883–1893 |
Boyd Dunlop Morehead | Conservative | Balonne | 1871–1880; 1883–1896 |
Arthur Morgan | Independent/Opp. | Warwick | 1887–1896; 1898–1906 |
Arthur Morry[3] | Liberal/Opp. | South Brisbane | 1890–1893 |
Frank Reid Murphy[6] | Conservative | Barcoo | 1885–1892 |
John Murray | Conservative | Normanby | 1888–1901 |
Hugh Nelson | Conservative | Murilla | 1883–1898 |
William North | Conservative | Lockyer | 1888–1893 |
Albert Norton | Conservative | Port Curtis | 1878–1893 |
William O'Connell | Conservative | Musgrave | 1888–1903 |
Patrick O'Sullivan | Independent/Min. | Stanley | 1860–1863; 1867–1868; 1876–1883; 1888–1893 |
Edward Palmer | Conservative | Carpentaria | 1883–1893 |
William Pattison | Conservative | Rockhampton | 1886–1893 |
Sheffield Paul | Conservative | Leichhardt | 1878–1879; 1888–1893 |
Patrick Perkins | Conservative | Cambooya | 1877–1884; 1888–1893 |
Robert Philp | Conservative | Townsville | 1886–1915 |
Thomas Plunkett | Conservative | Albert | 1888–1896; 1899–1908 |
Charles Powers | Conservative | Burrum | 1888–1896 |
Arthur Rutledge | Liberal/Opp. | Charters Towers | 1878–1893; 1899–1904 |
Tommy Ryan[6] | Labour | Barcoo | 1892–1893 |
William Salkeld | Liberal/Opp. | Fassifern | 1883–1893 |
Robert Sayers | Independent | Charters Towers | 1888–1893 |
Robert Harrison Smith | Conservative | Bowen | 1888–1902 |
William Smyth | Liberal/Min. | Gympie | 1883–1899 |
William Stephens | Liberal/Min. | Woolloongabba | 1888–1904; 1907–1908 |
Ernest James Stevens | Independent | Logan | 1878–1896 |
John Stevenson | Conservative | Clermont | 1876–1893 |
Horace Tozer | Independent/Min. | Wide Bay | 1871; 1888–1898 |
Theodore Unmack | Liberal/Min. | Toowong | 1888–1893 |
John Watson | Conservative | Fortitude Valley | 1888–1896 |
Frederick Wimble | Liberal/Opp. | Cairns | 1888–1893 |
Notes
- 1 On 17 July 1889, Robert Lyons, the member for Fitzroy, resigned. Albert Callan won the resulting by-election on 3 August 1889.
- 2 On 24 June 1890, Ernest Hunter, the member for Burke, resigned following his being adjudicated as insolvent. Labour candidate John Hoolan won the resulting by-election on 9 August 1890.
- 3 On 30 June 1890, Henry Jordan, one of the two members for South Brisbane, died. Arthur Morry won the resulting by-election on 17 July 1890.
- 4 On 30 March 1891, John Murtagh Macrossan, one of the two members for Townsville, died. William Villiers Brown won the resulting by-election on 2 May 1891.
- 5 On 12 June 1891, George Hall Jones, the member for Burnett, resigned. James Cadell won the resulting by-election on 11 July 1891.
- 6 On 24 January 1892, Frank Reid Murphy, the member for Barcoo, died. Labour candidate Tommy Ryan won the resulting by-election on 5 March 1892.
- 7 On 29 March 1892, John Buckland, the member for Bulimba, resigned following his being adjudicated as insolvent. James Dickson won the resulting by-election on 16 April 1892.
- 8 On 15 May 1892, Walter Adams, the member for Bundaberg, died. Labour candidate George Hall won the resulting by-election on 16 June 1892.
- 9 On 15 October 1892, Jean-Baptiste Isambert, the member for Rosewood, resigned following his being adjudicated as insolvent. James Foote won the resulting by-election on 15 November 1892.
See also
- Premier:
- Thomas McIlwraith (Conservative) (1888)
- Boyd Dunlop Morehead (Conservative) (1888–1890)
- Samuel Griffith (Ministerial) (1890–1893)
- Thomas McIlwraith (Ministerial) (1893)
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.
- Hughes, Colin A.; Graham, B. D. (1976). Voting for the Queensland Legislative Assembly, 1890-1964. Canberra: Australian National University. ISBN 0-7081-0301-4.
- The General Election. List of Candidates Brisbane Courier, 26 April 1888, p. 6.
Preceded by 9th Assembly |
10th Queensland Legislative Assembly 1888–1893 |
Succeeded by 11th Assembly |
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