This is a list of members of the Tasmanian House of Assembly between the 1897 election and the 1900 election.
Party affiliations were relatively loose during the period, although a Liberal grouping had formed over the 1890s around Sir Edward Braddon, the Premier of Tasmania until 12 October 1899, and Andrew Inglis Clark. A separate grouping, generally described as Ministerial, supported Elliott Lewis, who was Premier for the final five months of the parliamentary term. As was common at such changes in Tasmanian politics, several Liberal MHAs affiliated with the new government by the time of the 1900 election.
The 1897 election was the first to use a limited version of the Hare-Clark system within Hobart and Launceston, which were given 6 and 4 seats respectively, while still using first past the post single-member constituencies elsewhere in the state. It was renewed and adjusted periodically until the 1909 election, when the entire State was redivided into five electorates using the Hare-Clark system.
Name | Party | District | Years in office |
---|---|---|---|
William Aikenhead | Ministerial/Liberal | Devonport/Latrobe [2] | 1898–1902 |
Frank Archer | Liberal | Selby | 1893–1902 |
Jonathan Best [7] | Ministerial | Deloraine | 1894–1897; 1899–1912; 1913 |
Stafford Bird [M4] | Independent/Ministerial | Franklin | 1882–1903; 1904–1909 |
Sir Edward Braddon [M2] | Liberal | West Devon | 1879–1888; 1893–1901 |
John Bradley | Liberal/Ministerial | Hobart | 1893–1900 |
Nicholas John Brown | Independent | Cumberland | 1875–1903 |
William Brown | Independent/Liberal | Campbell Town | 1882–1889; 1893–1903 |
William Burbury [7] | Ministerial/Independent | Oatlands | 1899–1903 |
Daniel Burke | Ministerial | Cressy | 1893–1903 |
Norman Cameron [7] | Ministerial | Deloraine | 1893–1894; 1897–1899; 1912–1913; 1925–1928 |
Andrew Inglis Clark [1] | Liberal | Hobart | 1878–1882; 1887–1898 |
Matthew Clarke | Liberal | Launceston | 1897–1900 |
Alfred Crisp | Liberal | Hobart | 1886–1900 |
Edward Crowther | Liberal/Ministerial | Kingborough | 1878–1912 |
John Davies | Independent/Ministerial | Fingal | 1884–1913 |
Henry Dobson | Ministerial | Brighton | 1891–1900 |
Henry Dumaresq | Liberal/Ministerial | Longford | 1886–1903 |
John Evans | Independent | Kingborough | 1897–1937 |
Alexander Fowler | Liberal/Independent | Launceston | 1893; 1897–1901 |
Sir Philip Fysh [3] | Liberal | Hobart | 1873–1878; 1894–1898 |
James Gaffney [4] | Liberal/Ministerial | Lyell | 1899–1903 |
George Gilmore | Ministerial | George Town | 1893–1900; 1903–1906 |
Charles Hall | Independent | Waratah | 1897–1903 |
John Hamilton | Liberal/Ministerial | Glenorchy | 1887–1903 |
William Hartnoll | Ministerial | Launceston | 1884–1902 |
John Henry [2] | Ministerial | Devonport | 1891–1897 |
Charles Hoggins [1] | Liberal | Hobart | 1898–1900; 1900–1903; 1917–1919 |
George Leatham | Liberal/Ministerial | New Norfolk | 1891–1903; 1906–1909 |
Elliott Lewis [M4] | Ministerial | Richmond | 1886–1903; 1909–1922 |
Charles Mackenzie | Ministerial | Wellington | 1886–1909 |
William McWilliams | Liberal/Independent | Ringarooma | 1893–1900 |
Edward Miles [M3] [6] | Liberal | Glamorgan | 1883–1899; 1900 |
Edward Mulcahy [M4] | Liberal | Hobart | 1891–1903; 1910–1919 |
Henry Murray | Ministerial/Independent | Latrobe/Devonport [2] | 1891–1900; 1902–1909 |
William Page | Independent | Hobart | 1897–1900 |
Alfred Pillinger [5] | Liberal | Oatlands | 1876–1899 |
William Propsting [3] | Liberal | Hobart | 1899–1905 |
Thomas Reibey | Liberal | Westbury | 1874–1903 |
Frederick Shaw [8] | Ministerial | Glamorgan | 1899–1903 |
Ronald Smith | Liberal | Launceston | 1897–1900 |
John von Stieglitz | Ministerial | Evandale | 1891–1903 |
Don Urquhart [M1] | Liberal/Independent | Montagu | 1894–1903; 1906–1909 |
Joseph Woollnough | Ministerial | Sorell | 1893–1903 |
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Sir Philip Oakley Fysh was an English-born Australian politician. He arrived in Tasmania in 1859 and became a leading merchant in Hobart. He served two terms as premier of Tasmania and became a leader of the colony's federation movement. He subsequently won election to the new federal House of Representatives (1901–1910) and was invited to represent Tasmania in the first federal ministry, serving as minister without portfolio (1901–1903) and Postmaster-General (1903–1904).
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