This is a list of members of the Western Australian Legislative Assembly between the 1908 elections and the 1911 elections, together known as the Seventh Parliament.
Name | Party | District | Years in office |
---|---|---|---|
William Angwin | Labor | East Fremantle | 1904–1905; 1906–1927 |
Edward Barnett [5] | Ministerial | Albany | 1905–1909 |
Thomas Bath | Labor | Brown Hill | 1902–1914 |
Harry Bolton | Labor | North Fremantle | 1904–1917 |
Harry Brown | Ministerial | Perth | 1904–1911 |
William Butcher [9] | Ministerial | Gascoyne | 1901–1911; 1915–1917 |
Henry Carson | Ministerial | Geraldton | 1904–1906; 1908–1911 |
Philip Collier | Labor | Boulder | 1905–1948 |
Frank Cowcher | Ministerial | Williams | 1904–1911 |
Hon Henry Daglish [11] | Ministerial | Subiaco | 1901–1911 |
Arthur Davies | Ministerial | South Fremantle | 1906–1911 |
Thomas Draper | Ministerial | West Perth | 1907–1911; 1917–1921 |
John Foulkes | Ministerial | Claremont | 1902–1911 |
William James George [2] | Ministerial | Murray | 1895–1902; 1909–1930 |
Frederick Gill | Labor | Balcatta | 1904–1905; 1908–1914 |
William Gordon | Ministerial | Canning | 1901–1911 |
Hugh Gourley | Labor | Mount Leonora | 1908–1911 |
Hon Henry Gregory [1] | Ministerial | Menzies | 1897–1911 |
John Hardwick | Ministerial | East Perth | 1904–1911; 1914–1921 |
Nat Harper [10] | Ministerial | Beverley | 1910–1914 |
Thomas Hayward | Ministerial | Wellington | 1901–1911 |
Edward Heitmann | Labor | Cue | 1904–1913; 1914–1917 |
John Holman | Labor | Murchison | 1901–1921; 1923–1925 |
John Marquis Hopkins [10] | Ministerial | Beverley | 1901–1905; 1908–1910 |
Austin Horan | Labor | Yilgarn | 1904–1911 |
Charles Hudson | Labor | Dundas | 1905–1921 |
Mathieson Jacoby | Ministerial | Swan | 1901–1905; 1908–1911 |
William Johnson | Labor | Guildford | 1901–1905; 1906–1917; 1924–1948 |
Dennis Jones [7] | Labor | Forrest | 1910 |
Hon Norbert Keenan | Min / Ind | Kalgoorlie | 1905–1911; 1930–1950 |
Charles Layman | Ministerial | Nelson | 1904–1914 |
Hon Arthur Male | Ministerial | Kimberley | 1905–1917 |
Charles McDowall | Labor | Coolgardie | 1908–1916 |
John McLarty [2] | Ministerial | Murray | 1904–1909 |
Hon James Mitchell [3] | Ministerial | Northam | 1905–1933 |
Frederick Monger | Ministerial | York | 1892–1903; 1905–1914 |
Hon Sir Newton Moore [12] | Ministerial | Bunbury | 1904–1911 |
Samuel Moore | Ministerial | Irwin | 1904–1914 |
William Murphy [8] | Ministerial | Fremantle | 1910–1911 |
Hon John Nanson [4] | Ministerial | Greenough | 1901–1905; 1908–1914 |
Peter O'Loghlen [7] | Labor | Forrest | 1908–1923 |
Henry Osborn | Ministerial | Roebourne | 1908–1911 |
Arnold Piesse [6] | Ministerial | Katanning | 1909–1914; 1930–1935 |
Frederick Henry Piesse [6] | Ministerial | Katanning | 1890–1909 |
Hon James Price [8] | Ministerial | Fremantle | 1905–1910 |
William Price [5] | Labor | Albany | 1909–1917 |
Hon Timothy Quinlan | Ministerial | Toodyay | 1890–1894; 1897–1911 |
John Scaddan | Labor | Ivanhoe | 1904–1917; 1919–1924; 1930–1933 |
Herbert Swan | Labor | North Perth | 1908–1914 |
George Taylor | Labor | Mount Margaret | 1901–1930 |
William Lemen Thomas [12] | Labor | Bunbury | 1911–1917 |
Michael Troy | Labor | Mount Magnet | 1904–1939 |
Henry Underwood | Labor | Pilbara | 1906–1924 |
Thomas Walker | Labor | Kanowna | 1905–1932 |
Francis Ware | Labor | Hannans | 1905–1911 |
Arthur Wilson | Labor | Collie | 1908–1947 |
Hon Frank Wilson | Ministerial | Sussex | 1897–1901; 1904–1917 |
Henry Daglish was an Australian politician who was the sixth premier of Western Australia and the first from the Labor Party, serving from 10 August 1904 to 25 August 1905. Daglish was born in Ballarat, Victoria, and studied at the University of Melbourne. In 1882, he worked as a mechanical engineer but soon switched to working in the Victorian public service. He first stood for election in 1896 but failed to win the Victorian Legislative Assembly seat of Melbourne South. He then moved to Subiaco, Western Australia, where he found work as a chief clerk in the Western Australian Police Department. In 1900, Daglish was elected to the Subiaco Municipal Council and in April the following year, he was elected to the Western Australian Legislative Assembly as the member for the newly created seat of Subiaco, becoming one of six Labor members in the Western Australian Legislative Assembly. The party elected him as its whip, and he resigned from the Subiaco council on 1 May 1901. On 1 December 1902, Daglish was sworn in as mayor of Subiaco, having been elected the previous month.
Frank Wilson, was the ninth Premier of Western Australia, serving on two separate occasions – from 1910 to 1911 and then again from 1916 to 1917.
John Scaddan, CMG, popularly known as "Happy Jack", was Premier of Western Australia from 7 October 1911 until 27 July 1916.
The Electoral district of Brown Hill-Ivanhoe was a Legislative Assembly electorate in the state of Western Australia. It covered part of the Goldfields city of Boulder, near Kalgoorlie, and neighbouring mining areas. It was created at the 1911 redistribution out of the former seats of Brown Hill and Ivanhoe, and was first contested at the 1911 election. It was abolished in the 1948 redistribution, with its area split between the neighbouring electorates of Boulder and Hannans, taking effect from the 1950 election. The seat was a very safe one for the Labor Party.
This is a list of members of the Western Australian Legislative Assembly between the 1894 elections and the 1897 elections, together known as the Second Parliament.
This is a list of members of the Western Australian Legislative Assembly between the 1911 election and the 1914 election, together known as the Eighth Parliament. All members who sat as Liberals, apart from those returned at by-elections, were elected under the "Ministerial" designation at the 1911 election.
This is a list of members of the Western Australian Legislative Assembly between the 1905 elections and the 1908 elections, together known as the Sixth Parliament.
This is a list of members of the Western Australian Legislative Assembly between the 1904 elections and the 1905 elections, together known as the Fifth Parliament.
This is a list of members of the Western Australian Legislative Assembly between the 1901 election and the 1904 election, together known as the Fourth Parliament.
This is a list of members of the Western Australian Legislative Assembly between the 1914 election and the 1917 election, together known as the Ninth Parliament. The re-election of Premier John Scaddan's Labor Government with a 26-24 majority in 1914 was tempered when, a year later, Labor member Joseph Gardiner's seat was declared vacant on account of his non-attendance and a Liberal was elected in his stead, and Labor became a minority government when on 18 December 1915, Edward Johnston resigned from the Labor Party and became an independent. On 27 July 1916, the Scaddan Ministry was defeated and the Liberals' Frank Wilson became the new Premier.
This is a list of members of the Western Australian Legislative Assembly between the 1947 election and the 1950 election, together known as the 19th Parliament.
This is a list of members of the Western Australian Legislative Council from 22 May 1910 to 21 May 1912. The chamber had 30 seats made up of ten provinces each electing three members, on a system of rotation whereby one-third of the members would retire at each biennial election. Prior to the 1910 election, the Council had thought of itself as entirely independent from party politics, but with the election of Labor members to the Council and Labor's vigorous campaign at the 1911 election for the Legislative Assembly, many of its members joined the newly formed Liberal Party which had emerged from the various National Political Leagues and Liberal Leagues.
This is a list of members of the Western Australian Legislative Assembly between the 1917 election and the 1921 election, together known as the 10th Parliament.
This is a list of members of the Western Australian Legislative Assembly between the 1921 election and the 1924 election, together known as the 11th Parliament. During the term, the Country Party split into rival factions, the Ministerial Country Party (MCP) which comprised the bulk of the parliamentary party—many of whom had switched allegiance from other parties since 1919—and the Executive Country Party (ECP), which was loyal to the Primary Producers' Association, which the Country Party was intended to represent in Parliament. After the 1924 election, which significantly strengthened the latter at the expense of the former, the Ministerial arm merged with the Nationalist Party.
This is a list of members of the Western Australian Legislative Assembly between the 1933 election and the 1936 election, together known as the 15th Parliament.
This is a list of members of the Tasmanian House of Assembly between the 1893 election and the 1897 election.
This is a list of members of the Tasmanian House of Assembly between the 1897 election and the 1900 election.
This is a list of members of the Tasmanian House of Assembly between the 1900 election and the 1903 election.
This is a list of members of the Tasmanian Legislative Council between 1891 and 1897. Terms of the Legislative Council did not coincide with Legislative Assembly elections, and members served six year terms, with a number of members facing election each year.