Members of the Queensland Legislative Assembly, 1908–1909

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This is a list of members of the 17th Legislative Assembly of Queensland from February 1908 to October 1909, as elected at the 1908 state election held on 5 February 1908. [1]

The Philp Ministry did not command a majority on the floor of the Assembly during its short term of government, and the Assembly was dissolved, resulting in gains for both the Kidstonites and Labour, and the return of William Kidston as Premier. However, in late 1908, the two non-Labour parties merged into a new grouping known as the Liberals, also sometimes identified as the Ministerial party (a generic form referring to supporters of the Ministry). As not all members of the original parties supported the new Government, Kidston called another election — the third in 29 months — for 2 October 1909.

NameParty (pre-1908)Party (post-1908) Electorate Term in office
John Adamson Labour Labour Maryborough 1907–1909; 1911–1917
Peter Airey Kidston Opposition South Brisbane 1901–1907; 1908–1909
Frank Allen [1] N/ALabour Bulloo 1909–1912
John Appel Conservative Liberal Albert 1908–1929
William Drayton Armstrong ConservativeLiberal Lockyer 1893–1904; 1907–1918
George Philip Barber LabourLabour Bundaberg 1901–1935
George Powell Barnes Farmers' Rep.Liberal Warwick 1908–1935
Walter Barnes ConservativeLiberal Bulimba 1901–1915; 1918–1933
Edward Barton KidstonLiberal Brisbane North 1908–1909
Joshua Thomas Bell KidstonLiberal Dalby 1893–1911
James Blair KidstonOpposition Ipswich 1902–1915
David Bowman LabourLabour Fortitude Valley 1899–1902; 1904–1916
James Brennan KidstonLiberal North Rockhampton 1907–1912
John Dunmore Campbell [2] ConservativeLiberal Moreton 1899–1909
Richard John Cottell KidstonLiberal Toowong 1908–1911
Henri Cowap KidstonLiberal Fitzroy 1902–1909
Harry Coyne LabourLabour Warrego 1908–1923
James Cribb ConservativeLiberal Bundamba 1893–1896; 1899–1915
Digby Denham ConservativeLiberal Oxley 1902–1915
Henry Douglas KidstonOpposition Cook 1907–1915
Edward Barrow Forrest ConservativeLiberal Brisbane North 1899–1912
James Forsyth [2] N/ALiberal Moreton 1899–1907; 1909–1918
George Fox ConservativeLiberal Normanby 1877–1878; 1901–1914
Kenneth Grant KidstonLiberal Rockhampton 1902–1915
Francis Grayson ConservativeLiberal Cunningham 1904–1920
Donald Gunn IndependentLiberal Carnarvon 1907–1920
William Hamilton LabourLabour Gregory 1899–1915
Patrick Hanran ConservativeLiberal Townsville 1899–1909
Herbert Hardacre LabourLabour Leichhardt 1893–1919
Arthur Hawthorn KidstonLiberal Enoggera 1902–1911
Robert Herbertson KidstonOpposition Port Curtis 1904–1909
David Hunter KidstonLiberal Woolloongabba 1908–1912
John Hunter LabourLabour Maranoa 1907–1919
John Huxham LabourLabour South Brisbane 1908–1909, 1912–1924
George Jackson KidstonLiberal Kennedy 1893–1909
Charles Moffatt Jenkinson ConservativeOpposition Fassifern 1898–1902; 1903–1909
Alfred Jones LabourLabour Burnett 1904–1909, 1915–1917,
1922–1932
Francis Kenna KidstonOpposition Bowen 1902–1909
Denis Keogh ConservativeLiberal Rosewood 1896–1902; 1904–1911
George Kerr KidstonOpposition Barcoo 1893–1909
William Kidston KidstonLiberal Rockhampton 1896–1911
Edward Land LabourLabour Balonne 1904–1927
John Leahy [1] ConservativeLiberal Bulloo 1893–1909
William Lennon LabourLabour Herbert 1907–1920
Vincent Lesina LabourLabour Clermont 1899–1912
Donald MacKintosh KidstonLiberal Cambooya 1899–1915
Peter McLachlan LabourLabour Fortitude Valley 1908–1912, 1915–1920,
1923–1929
John Mann KidstonOpposition Cairns 1904–1912
William Maxwell KidstonLiberal Burke 1899–1909
John May LabourLabour Flinders 1907–1917
William Mitchell LabourLabour Maryborough 1904–1909
William Moore ConservativeLiberal Murilla 1898–1904; 1907–1909
Daniel Mulcahy LabourLabour Gympie 1901–1912
John Mullan LabourLabour Charters Towers 1908–1912, 1918–1941
William Murphy KidstonOpposition Croydon 1904–1907; 1908–1918
Thomas Nevitt LabourLabour Carpentaria 1907–1912
Walter Paget ConservativeLiberal Mackay 1901–1915
John Payne LabourLabour Mitchell 1905–1928
Andrew Lang Petrie ConservativeLiberal Toombul 1893–1926
Robert Philp ConservativeLiberal Townsville 1886–1915
Colin Rankin KidstonLiberal Burrum 1905–1918
Vernon Redwood KidstonOpposition Drayton & Toowoomba 1907–1909
Robert Roberts KidstonLiberal Drayton & Toowoomba 1907–1934
George Ryland LabourLabour Gympie 1899–1912
William Ryott Maughan LabourLabour Ipswich 1898–1899; 1904–1912
Henry Plantagenet Somerset ConservativeLiberal Stanley 1904–1920
James Stodart ConservativeLiberal Logan 1896–1918
Richard Sumner KidstonOpposition Nundah 1907–1909
Edward Swayne ConservativeLiberal Mackay 1907–1935
William Thorn Farmers' Rep.Liberal Aubigny 1894–1904; 1908–1912
Harry Walker ConservativeLiberal Wide Bay 1907–1947
John White ConservativeLiberal Musgrave 1903–1904; 1907–1915
Vern Winstanley LabourLabour Charters Towers 1908–1932
Michael Woods KidstonOpposition Woothakata 1902–1909
1 On 20 January 1909, John Leahy, the Liberal member for Bulloo, died. Labour candidate Frank Allen won the resulting by-election on 27 March 1909.
2 On 27 May 1909, John Dunmore Campbell, the Liberal member for Moreton, died. Liberal candidate James Forsyth won the resulting by-election on 19 June 1909.

See also

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The Second Kidston Ministry was the 25th ministry of the Government of Queensland and was led by Premier William Kidston. It succeeded the Second Philp Ministry on 18 February 1908, 13 days after the 1908 state election. The ministry was followed by the Denham Ministry on 7 February 1911 following Kidston's retirement from politics.

The First Kidston Ministry was the 23rd ministry of the Government of Queensland and was led by Premier William Kidston, who led a Labour–Liberal coalition. It succeeded the Morgan Ministry on 19 January 1906 upon the appointment of Arthur Morgan as president of the Queensland Legislative Council. The Labour Party split in 1907, with Kidston and several other moderate Labour members combining with the remaining Liberals in a new party, the "Kidstonites".

The Second Philp Ministry was the 24th ministry of the Government of Queensland and was led by Premier Robert Philp, who led the Conservative party. It succeeded the Second Kidston Ministry on 19 November 1907 following Kidston's resignation on 12 November 1907. The Ministry lost a vote of no-confidence in the Legislative Assembly by 37 to 29 on its first day, and Philp asked for and obtained a dissolution of Parliament. At the 5 February 1908 election, the Conservative party lost seven Assembly seats including those of two of the ministers, and on 14 February Philp resigned. The Ministry formally concluded on 18 February 1908, and was succeeded by the Second Kidston Ministry.

The Morgan Ministry was the 22nd ministry of the Government of Queensland and was led by Premier Arthur Morgan, who led a Liberal–Labour coalition.

The Bulloo state by-election, 1909 was a by-election held on 27 March 1909 for the Queensland Legislative Assembly seat of Bulloo, based in the remote south western part of the state.

The Moreton state by-election, 1909 was a by-election held on 19 June 1909 for the Queensland Legislative Assembly seat of Moreton, based to the north of Brisbane.

References

  1. "Queensland General Election Dates 1860-1929" (PDF). Queensland Parliament. Archived from the original (PDF) on 16 December 2013. Retrieved 16 December 2013.