South-East Province
Appearance
The South-East Province was an electoral region of the Western Australian Legislative Council, introduced after the introduction of responsible government in the 1890s. It initially comprised Williams, Plantagenet, and Albany Electoral Districts.[1]
Members
[edit]Three members (1894–1965) | |||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Member 1 | Party | Term | Member 2 | Party | Term | Member 3 | Party | Term | |||
Frederick Crowder | None | 1894–1900 | Samuel Haynes | None | 1894–1910 | Charles Piesse | None | 1894–1914 | |||
Wesley Maley | None | 1900–1909 | |||||||||
Joseph Cullen | None | 1909–1910 | |||||||||
Liberal | 1910–1917 | Cuthbert McKenzie | Liberal | 1910–1914 | Liberal | 1910–1914 | |||||
Country | 1914–1922 | George Sewell | Country | 1914–1916 | |||||||
James Greig | Country | 1916–1925 | |||||||||
Hector Stewart | Country | 1917–1931 | |||||||||
Alfred Burvill | Country | 1922–1928 | |||||||||
William Glasheen | Country | 1925–1932 | |||||||||
Charles Wittenoom | Country | 1928–1940 | |||||||||
Alec Thomson | Country | 1931–1950 | |||||||||
Harold Piesse | Ind. Country | 1932–1938 | |||||||||
Country | 1938–1944 | ||||||||||
Hugh Roche | Country | 1940–1950 | |||||||||
Anthony Loton | Country | 1944–1950 | |||||||||
Major reconstitution in 1950 – existing South-East Province members effectively swapped with existing South Province members. | |||||||||||
Robert Boylen | Labor | 1950–1955 | John Cunningham | Liberal | 1950–1954 | George Bennetts | Labor | 1950–1965 | |||
Jim Garrigan | None | 1954–1965 | |||||||||
John Cunningham | Liberal | 1955–1962 | |||||||||
Claude Stubbs | None | 1962–1965 |
Two members (1965–1989) | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Member | Party | Term | Member | Party | Term | ||
Jim Garrigan | Labor | 1965–1971 | Claude Stubbs | Labor | 1965–1980 | ||
Ron Leeson | Labor | 1971–1983 | |||||
Jim Brown | Labor | 1980–1989 | |||||
Mark Nevill | Labor | 1983–1989 |
References
[edit]- ^ "Constitution Act Amendment Act, 1896" (PDF). AustLII. Retrieved 30 April 2016.