Members of the Western Australian Legislative Council, 1926–1928

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This is a list of members of the Western Australian Legislative Council from 22 May 1926 to 21 May 1928. 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.

NamePartyProvinceTerm
expires
Years in office
Charles Baxter Country East 19321914–1950
John Reid Brown Labor North-East 19301924–1930
Alfred Burvill Country South-East 19281922–1928
James Cornell Nationalist South 19301912–1946
Jabez Dodd [1] Nationalist South 19281910–1928
John Drew Labor Central 19301900–1918; 1924–1947
John Ewing Nationalist South-West 19301916–1933
William Glasheen Country South-East 19321925–1932
Edmund Gray Labor West 19321923–1952
Vernon Hamersley Country East 19281904–1946
Edgar Harris Nationalist North-East 19321920–1934
James Hickey Labor Central 19281916–1928
Joseph Holmes Independent North 19321914–1942
George Kempton Country Central 19321926–1932
John Kirwan Independent South 19321908–1946
William Kitson Labor West 19301924–1947
Sir William Lathlain Nationalist Metropolitan-Suburban 19321926–1932
Arthur Lovekin Nationalist Metropolitan 19301919–1931
James Macfarlane Nationalist Metropolitan 19281922–1928; 1930–1942
William Mann Nationalist South-West 19321926–1951
George Miles Independent North 19301916–1950
John Nicholson Nationalist Metropolitan 19321918–1941
George Potter Nationalist West 19281922–1928
George Rainsford [1] Nationalist South 19281928
Edwin Rose Nationalist South-West 19281916–1934
Athelstan Saw Nationalist Metropolitan-Suburban 19281915–1929
Harold Seddon Nationalist North-East 19281922–1954
Henry Stephenson Nationalist Metropolitan-Suburban 19301924–1930
Hector Stewart Country South-East 19301917–1931
Sir Edward Wittenoom Nationalist North 19281883–1884; 1885–1886;
1894–1898; 1902–1906;
1910–1934
Herbert Yelland Nationalist East 19301924–1936

Notes

1 On 2 January 1928, South Province Nationalist MLC Jabez Dodd died. Nationalist candidate George Rainsford won the resulting by-election on 11 February 1928—however, he was not sworn in and did not take his seat, and was defeated at the Council elections three months later.

Sources

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