This is a list of members of the South Australian Legislative Council from 1918 to 1921.
Name | District | Party | Term expiry | Time in office |
---|---|---|---|---|
John George Bice | Northern | Liberal Union | 1921 | 1894–1923 |
Joseph Botterill [2] | Southern | Liberal Union | 1921 | 1915–1920 |
John Carr | Central No. 1 | Labor | 1921 | 1915–1929 |
John Herbert Cooke | Central No. 2 | Liberal Union | 1921 | 1915–1933 |
John Cowan | Southern | Liberal Union | 1924 | 1910–1944 |
Walter Gordon Duncan | Midland | Liberal Union | 1924 | 1918–1962 |
Tom Gluyas | Central No. 1 | Labor | 1924 | 1918–1931 |
David Gordon | Midland | Liberal Union | 1924 | 1913–1944 |
Walter Hannaford | Midland | Liberal Union | 1921 | 1912–1941 |
William Humphrey Harvey | Central No. 2 | National Party | 1924 | 1915–1935 |
James Jelley | Central No. 1 | Labor | 1921 | 1912–1933 |
Andrew Kirkpatrick | Central No. 1 | Labor | 1924 | 1891–1897, 1900–1909, 1918–1928 |
John Lewis | Northern | Liberal Union | 1921 | 1898–1923 |
Thomas McCallum [2] | Southern | Liberal Union | 1921 | 1920–1938 |
William George Mills | Northern | Farmers and Settlers | 1924 | 1918–1933 |
William Morrow | Northern | Liberal Union | 1924 | 1915–1934 |
Thomas Pascoe | Midland | Liberal Union | 1921 | 1900–1933 |
Sir Lancelot Stirling | Southern | Liberal Union | 1924 | 1891–1932 |
Henry Tassie | Central No. 2 | Liberal Union | 1924 | 1918–1938 |
Alfred von Doussa | Southern | Liberal Union/Independent [3] | 1921 | 1901–1921 |
Frederick Samuel Wallis | Central No. 2 | Labor/Independent [1] | 1921 | 1907–1921 |
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Members of the New South Wales Legislative Council who served in the 54th Parliament were elected at the 2003 and 2007 elections. As members serve eight-year terms, half of the Council was elected in 2003 and did not face re-election in 2007, and the members elected in 2007 did not face re-election until 2011. The President was Meredith Burgmann.</ref>
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This is a list of members of the Western Australian Legislative Council between 22 May 2001 and 21 May 2005:
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Archibald Henry Peake was an Australian politician. He was Premier of South Australia on three occasions: from 1909 to 1910 for the Liberal and Democratic Union, and from 1912 to 1915 and 1917 to 1920 for its successor, the Liberal Union. He had also been Treasurer and Attorney-General in the Price-Peake coalition government from 1905 to 1909.
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This is a list of members of the South Australian Legislative Council from 1915 to 1918.
This is a list of members of the South Australian Legislative Council from 1921 to 1924.
The National Party was a political party active in South Australia from 1917 to 1923. As with the federal National Labor Party, it was created in the wake of the Australian Labor Party split over conscription, resulting in the February 1917 expulsion from the South Australian Labor Party of the Premier, Crawford Vaughan, and his supporters. It was initially known as the National Labor Party like its federal counterpart, but was renamed at a conference in June 1917. The party initially continued in government under Vaughan, but was subsequently defeated in parliament in July 1917, and thereafter served as the junior partner in a coalition with the Liberal Union under Archibald Peake.
This is a list of members of the South Australian House of Assembly from 1918 to 1921, as elected at the 1918 state election:
This is a list of candidates of the 1918 South Australian state election.
This is a list of members of the South Australian House of Assembly from 1915 to 1918, as elected at the 1915 state election:
This is a list of candidates of the 1933 South Australian state election.
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