Electoral district of Emerald Hill

Emerald Hill
VictoriaLegislative Assembly

Location within Greater Melbourne area, 1859
State Victoria
Created 1859
Abolished 1904
Demographic Inner Metropolitan
Coordinates 37°50′S 144°58′E / 37.833°S 144.967°E / -37.833; 144.967Coordinates: 37°50′S 144°58′E / 37.833°S 144.967°E / -37.833; 144.967

Emerald Hill was an electoral district of the Victorian Legislative Assembly, Australia. It covered part of the inner-city suburb South Melbourne and consisted part of the previous Electoral district of South Melbourne which was abolished in 1859. (The other part of the South Melbourne electorate became the Electoral district of Sandridge).

1859

Emerald Hill was first proclaimed in 1859,[1] and was defined in the Victorian Electoral Act, 1858 (which took effect at the 1859 elections) as:

  g This point is approximately where Wurundjeri Way crosses the south bank of the river now.[3]

District of Emerald Hill, c. 1859

1889

Emerald Hill was redefined as a single-member electorate by the Electoral Act Amendment Act 1888 (which took effect at the 1889 elections) as:

That part of the pre-1888 district immediately south of the Yarra became the Electoral district of Melbourne South.[4]

Parts of the electorate were later amalgamated into the Electoral district of Albert Park.[5]

Members for Emerald Hill

Member 1PartyTerm
  Robert Stirling Hore Anderson Oct 1859 – Aug 1864
  Henry Creswick Nov 1864 – Dec 1865
  John Whiteman Feb 1866 – Dec 1867
  George Frederic Verdon Mar 1868 – May 1868 2 Members (1877–1889)
  John Whiteman Jun 1868 – Apr 1877 Member 2 Party Term
  Andrew Lyell Ministerial[6] May 1877 – Jun 1880   John Nimmo Liberal May 1877 – Mar 1889
  Robert MacGregor Jul   1880 – Sep 1883
  David Gaunson Oct 1883 – Mar 1889
  Thomas Smith Labor Apr 1889 – May 1904

References

  1. "Re-member (former members)". Parliament of Victoria. Retrieved 8 January 2013.
  2. "An Act to alter the Electoral Districts of Victoria and to increase the number of Members of the Legislative Assembly thereof." (PDF). 1858. Retrieved 24 April 2013.
  3. The Gas Works are shown on this 1855 map of Melbourne (at right).
  4. 1 2 "The Electoral Act Amendment Act 1888" (pdf). Retrieved 12 June 2013.
  5. "Electoral Districts Boundaries Act 1903". Australasian Legal Information Institute. Retrieved 21 January 2014.
  6. "The New Parliament". The Camperdown Chronicle. 15 May 1877. Retrieved 8 January 2013.
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