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Candidates of the 1933 South Australian state election

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is a list of candidates of the 1933 South Australian state election.[1]

Retiring MPs

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Official Labor

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Parliamentary Labor

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Liberal and Country League

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House of Assembly

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Sitting members are shown in bold text. Successful candidates are marked with an asterisk.

Electorate Liberal and Country
candidates
Official Labor
candidates
Parliamentary Labor
candidates
Lang Labor
candidates
Single Tax
candidates
Grouped
Independent
candidates
Ungrouped
candidates
Adelaide (3) K. W. Hilton
Duncan Menzies
J. Trego-Williams
Martin Collaton
Herbert George
E. McDonnell
Bill Denny
M. A. Dwyer
C. V. Wells
Doug Bardolph*
Bob Dale* [1]
Tom Howard*
Tom Garland
Albert (2) Malcolm McIntosh*
Frederick McMillan
J. H. Groth
O. E. B. Kunoth
Tom Stott*
Alexandra (3) George Laffer*
Herbert Hudd*
Percy Heggaton*
Barossa (3) Henry Crosby*
Herbert Lyons*
Reginald Rudall
L. J. McMullin
Sid O'Flaherty
J. R. Whitfield
Thomas Edwards
Arthur McArthur [2]
H. L. Zadow
Herbert Basedow*
Lindsay Yelland
Burra Burra (3) George Jenkins*
Archibald McDonald*
Alexander Melrose*
T. J. Canny
J. S. Marner
L. W. Wilcott
Jack Critchley
Even George
Sydney McHugh
East Torrens (3) Charles Abbott*
Walter Hamilton*
Frank Perry*
L. B. Fenwick
Beasley Kearney
C. H. S. Nicholls
H. J. Byrne
C. C. Cooke
H. B. A. Dankel
Flinders (2) Arthur Christian*
J. M. McDonald
L. E. Cash
T. D. Cash
Edward Craigie*
J. P. Moore
A. H. Pfitzner
Murray (3) George Cummins Morphett*
Thomas Playford IV*
Howard Shannon*
J. T. Cassidy
D. S. Fraser
H. E. Gersch
Clement Collins
Robert Hunter
Frank Staniford
Newcastle (2) R. D. McEwin
C. L. O. Sunman
James Beerworth*
Lindsay Riches*
Thomas Butterfield
William Harvey
North Adelaide (2) Victor Marra Newland*
Shirley Jeffries*
Walter Warne
F. H. Wilton
A. S. Horne
C. G. Johnson
Port Adelaide (2) James Stephens*
Albert Thompson*
A. R. Dadleff
F. W. Hearne
E. A. Evans
A. J. W. Lewis
Charles Hayter
John Zwolsman
Port Pirie (2) Andrew Lacey*
John Fitzgerald*
Stanley (2) Robert Nicholls*
John Lyons*
Sturt (3) Ernest Anthoney*
Henry Dunks*
Horace Hogben*
Edgar Dawes
T. W. Grealy
J. R. Hawke
Victoria (2) Ronald Hunt*
Vernon Petherick*
Jim Corcoran
Eric Shepherd
Peter Crafter
A. F. Sutton
Wallaroo (2) P. A. J. Chynoweth
J. D. Phillips
John Pedler*
Robert Richards*
C. T. Chapman
F. G. Filmer
West Torrens (2) H. N. Barnes
Harry Kneebone
Alfred Blackwell*
John McInnes*
J. F. Naylon
A. F. Sonnemann
Jules Langdon
C. W. Lloyd
T. C. McGillick
Wooroora (3) Richard Layton Butler*
Archie Cameron*
Samuel Dennison*
Maurice Collins
E. G. E. Willis
A. J. Parker
Yorke Peninsula (2) Edward Giles
Baden Pattinson*
Daniel Davies*
Hugh Hudson

Legislative Council

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Sitting members are shown in bold text. Successful candidates are marked with an asterisk.

Electorate Liberal and Country
candidates
Official Labor
candidates
Parliamentary Labor
candidates
Grouped
Independent
candidates
Ungrouped
candidates
Central District No. 1 (2) Oscar Oates*
George Edwin Yates
T. J. Meers
Stanley Whitford*
John Cooke [3]
P. W. Rooney
A. O. R. Tapp
Central District No. 2 (2) Hermann Homburg*
Collier Cudmore*
Midland District (2) Ernest William Castine*
Walter Hannaford*
Northern District (2) Percy Blesing*
Hartley Gladstone Hawkins*
Southern District (2) Thomas McCallum*
Harry Dove Young*

Notes

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1 Bob Dale, the independent Labor MHA for Sturt, contested the 1933 election as a Lang Labor Party candidate for Adelaide.
2 Arthur McArthur, the incumbent PLP MHA for East Torrens, contested the 1933 election in Barossa.
3 John Herbert Cooke lost Liberal and Country League preselection to recontest Central District No. 2 and contested Central District No. 1 as an independent instead.

References

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  1. ^ "127 CANDIDATES WILL CONTEST 46 STATE ASSEMBLY SEATS". The News. Adelaide: National Library of Australia. 9 March 1933. p. 1. Retrieved 30 August 2015.
  2. ^ "Port Adelaide Candidates Chosen". The Advertiser. Adelaide: National Library of Australia. 1 February 1933. p. 16. Retrieved 30 August 2015.
  3. ^ a b "THE SOUTH AUSTRALIAN WORKER". The Australian Worker (Sydney, NSW : 1913 – 1950). Sydney: National Library of Australia. 15 March 1933. p. 15. Retrieved 30 August 2015.
  4. ^ a b c d "ELECTIONS". The Sydney Morning Herald. National Library of Australia. 20 March 1933. p. 9. Retrieved 30 August 2015.
  5. ^ a b c d "ELEVEN M.P.'S RETIRE". The Mail. Adelaide: National Library of Australia. 8 April 1933. p. 4. Retrieved 4 October 2015.