Members of the New South Wales Legislative Assembly who served in the 11th parliament of New South Wales held their seats from 1882 to 1885.[1][2][3][4]
Elections for the eleventh Legislative Assembly were held between 30 November and 21 December 1882 with parliament first meeting on 3 January 1883. The Assembly was expanded to 113 members elected in 40 single member electorates, 26 two member electorates, 3 three member electorate and 3 four member electorates. The parliament had a maximum term of 3 years and was dissolved on 7 October 1885 after 33 months. The Premiers during this parliament were Sir Alexander Stuart until 7 October 1885 and then George Dibbs. The Speaker was Edmund Barton.[5]
More information Name, Electorate ...
Name |
Electorate |
Years in office |
Joseph Abbott | Gunnedah | 1880–1901 |
Francis Abigail | West Sydney | 1880–1891 |
George Allen [lower-alpha 4] | Glebe | 1869–1883 |
Henry Badgery | Monaro | 1878–1885 |
Ezekiel Baker [lower-alpha 13] | Carcoar | 1870-1877 1879-1881 1884-1887 |
Robert Barbour | Murray | 1877-1880 1882-1894 |
Edmund Barton | East Sydney | 1879–1887, 1891–1894, 1898–1900 |
Russell Barton | Bourke | 1880–1886 |
Herbert Brown | Durham | 1875–1898 |
James Brunker | East Maitland | 1880–1904 |
David Buchanan | Mudgee | 1860–1862, 1864–1867, 1869–1877, 1879–1885, 1888–1889 |
Sydney Burdekin [lower-alpha 6] | East Sydney | 1880-1882 1884-1891 1892-1894 |
John Burns | Hunter | 1861–1869, 1872–1891 |
Robert Butcher | Paddington | 1882–1887 |
Angus Cameron | West Sydney | 1874–1889 1894-1896 |
George Campbell | Carcoar | 1881–1885 |
William Campbell | Gwydir | 1868–1869 1880-1886 |
George Cass | Bogan | 1880–1892 |
Michael Chapman [lower-alpha 4] | Glebe | 1883–1885 1887-1891 |
Henry Clarke | Eden | 1869–1894, 1895–1904 |
William Clarke | Orange | 1880–1889 |
Henry Cohen | West Maitland | 1874 - 1880 1882-1885 |
Edward Combes | East Macquarie | 1872-1874 1877-1885 |
Walter Coonan | Forbes | 1877-1880 1882-1887 |
Henry Copeland [lower-alpha 1][lower-alpha 2] | Newtown East Sydney | 1877–1883, 1883–1895, 1895–1900 |
John Cramsie | Balranald | 1880–1887 |
Thomas Dalton | Orange | 1882–1891 |
Thomas Dangar | Namoi | 1865–1885, 1887–1890 |
George Day | Albury | 1874–1889 |
George De Salis | Queanbeyan | 1882–1885 |
George Dibbs | St Leonards | 1874–1877, 1882–1895 |
James Ellis | Newcastle | 1882–1885 1887-1889 1894-1895 |
James Farnell | New England | 1860–1860, 1864–1885, 1887–1888 |
David Ferguson | Wellington | 1882–1891 |
William Fergusson | Glen Innes | 1880–1887 |
James Fletcher | Newcastle | 1880–1891 |
Alfred Fremlin | Redfern | 1880–1885 |
John Gannon [lower-alpha 14] | Argyle | 1881–1885 |
Jacob Garrard | Balmain | 1880–1898 |
Thomas Garrett | Camden | 1860–1871, 1872–1891 |
James Garvan | Eden | 1880–1894 |
Frederick Gibbes | Newtown | 1882–1888 |
John Gill | Tamworth | 1882–1885 |
Joseph Gorrick | Wollombi | 1882–1885 |
Albert Gould | Patrick's Plains | 1882–1898 |
Samuel Gray | Richmond | 1859-1864 1874-1880 1882-1885 |
George Griffiths | East Sydney | 1882–1885 |
Mark Hammond [lower-alpha 7] | Canterbury | 1884–1887 |
John Harris | South Sydney | 1877-1880 1882-1885 |
Thomas Hellyer [lower-alpha 10] | West Macquarie | 1882–1884 |
William Henson [lower-alpha 16] | Canterbury | 1880-1882 1885-1889 |
Louis Heydon | Yass Plains | 1882–1886 |
William Holborow | Argyle | 1880–1894 |
Bernhardt Holtermann [lower-alpha 15] | St Leonards | 1882–1885 |
Frederick Humphery | Shoalhaven | 1882–1887 |
William Hutchinson | Balmain | 1882–1885 |
Isaac Ives [lower-alpha 15] | St Leonards | 1885–1889 |
Sir Patrick Jennings | Bogan | 1869–1872 1880-1887 |
Auber Jones | Murrumbidgee | 1882–1885 |
John Lackey [lower-alpha 17] | Central Cumberland | 1860–1864, 1867–1885 |
Charles Lee [lower-alpha 12] | Tenterfield | 1884–1920 |
Leyser Levin | Hume | 1880–1885 |
Robert Levien | Tamworth | 1880–1889, 1889–1913 |
Lewis Lloyd [lower-alpha 10] | West Macquarie | 1882–1884 |
George Loughnan | Murrumbidgee | 1880–1885 |
Richard Luscombe [lower-alpha 9] | Northumberland | 1884–1885 |
Andrew Lynch [lower-alpha 13] | Carcoar | 1876–1884 |
William Lyne | Hume | 1880–1901 |
Richard Machattie | Bourke | 1882–1885 |
James Mackinnon | Young | 1882–1894 |
William McCourt | Camden | 1882–1885 1887-1913 |
Andrew McCulloch | Central Cumberland | 1877–1888 |
John McElhone [lower-alpha 2][lower-alpha 3] | East Sydney Upper Hunter | 1875-1889 1895-1898 |
John McLaughlin | Upper Hunter | 1880–1885 1895-1901 |
Henry McQuade | Hawkesbury | 1880 1882-1885 |
Ninian Melville | Northumberland | 1880–1887 1889-1894 |
George Merriman | West Sydney | 1882–1885 1887-1889 |
Joseph Mitchell [lower-alpha 1] | Newtown | 1881–1885 1888-1891 |
Henry Moses [lower-alpha 16] | Canterbury | 1869–1880 1882-1885 |
Richard Murray | Inverell | 1880–1885 |
Daniel O'Connor | West Sydney | 1877-1891 1900-1904 |
Joseph Olliffe | South Sydney | 1882–1885 |
Thomas O'Mara | Tumut | 1882–1885, 1887–1889 |
Sir Henry Parkes [lower-alpha 12][lower-alpha 14] | Tenterfield Argyle | 1856, 1858, 1859–1861, 1864–1870, 1872–1895 |
Varney Parkes [lower-alpha 17] | Central Cumberland | 1885–1888, 1891–1913 |
William Pigott [lower-alpha 7] | Canterbury | 1880–1884 |
William Poole | South Sydney | 1880–1885 |
William Proctor | New England | 1880–1887 |
John Purves | Clarence | 1880–1887 |
Edward Quin | Wentworth | 1882–1887 |
George Reid [lower-alpha 6] | East Sydney | 1880–1884 1885-1901 |
Charles Roberts | Hastings and Manning | 1882–1890 |
Sir John Robertson | Mudgee | 1856–1861, 1862–1865, 1865–1866, 1866–1870, 1870–1877, 1877–1878, 1882–1886 |
Andrew Ross | Molong | 1880–1904 |
Alexander Ryrie | Braidwood | 1880–1891 |
David Ryrie [lower-alpha 11] | Monaro | 1884–1885 |
John See | Grafton | 1880–1904 |
Thomas Slattery | Boorowa | 1880–1885 1887-1895 |
Bruce Smith [lower-alpha 8] | Gundagai | 1882–1884, 1889–1894 |
Robert Smith | Macleay | 1870–1889 |
Sydney Smith | East Macquarie | 1882–1898 1900 |
Thomas Smith | Nepean | 1877-1887 1895-1904 |
Gerald Spring | Young | 1869–1872 1882-1887 |
Septimus Stephen | Canterbury | 1882–1887 |
Alfred Stokes | Forbes | 1882–1891 |
Sir Alexander Stuart | Illawarra | 1874–1885 |
Francis Suttor [lower-alpha 5] | Bathurst | 1875–1890 |
John Sutherland | Redfern | 1860–1881, 1882–1889 |
Walter Targett | Hartley | 1882–1887 |
Harman Tarrant | Kiama | 1880–1887 |
Adolphus Taylor [lower-alpha 3] | Mudgee | 1882–1887 1890-1891 |
Hugh Taylor | Parramatta | 1882–1894 |
William Teece | Goulburn | 1872–1890 |
Atkinson Tighe [lower-alpha 9] | Northumberland | 1862–1869, 1882–1884 |
Robert Tooth [lower-alpha 11] | Monaro | 1880–1884 |
William Trickett | Paddington | 1880–1885 1887 |
Robert Vaughn | Grenfell | 1880–1894 |
James Watson [lower-alpha 8] | Gundagai | 1869–1882, 1884–1885 |
Robert White | Gloucester | 1882–1887 |
Robert Wilkinson | Balranald | 1880–1894 |
Alexander Wilson | Murray | 1880-1885 1887-1889 |
Robert Wisdom | Morpeth | 1859–1872, 1874–1887 |
George Withers | South Sydney | 1880–1885 1887-1889 |
Francis Wright | Redfern | 1882–1885, 1889–1903 |
James Young | Hastings and Manning | 1880–1901 1904-1907 |
Close
There was no party system in New South Wales politics until 1887. Under the constitution, ministers were required to resign to recontest their seats in a by-election when appointed. These by-elections are only noted when the minister was defeated; in general, he was elected unopposed.[4]
Mudgee MLA Adolphus Taylor, notorious for his disruption of Assembly proceedings, made an inflammatory speech in February 1883 in which he was challenged by Upper Hunter MLA John McElhone to resign and both would contest Taylor's seat of Mudgee. The challenge was accepted and both resigned. Taylor received 67% of the votes, defeating McElhone in the Mudgee by-election on 6 March 1883. McElhone had also been nominated for the Upper Hunter by-election, held on the same day, which saw him returned to his seat.[6]
By-elections in chronological order were
Newtown,[lower-alpha 1]
East Sydney,[lower-alpha 2]
Mudgee,[lower-alpha 3]
Glebe,[lower-alpha 4]
Orange,[lower-alpha 5]
East Sydney,[lower-alpha 6]
Canterbury,[lower-alpha 7]
Gundagai,[lower-alpha 8]
Northumberland,[lower-alpha 9]
West Macquarie,[lower-alpha 10]
Monaro,[lower-alpha 11]
Tenterfield,[lower-alpha 12]
Carcoar,[lower-alpha 13]
Argyle,[lower-alpha 14]
St Leonards,[lower-alpha 15]
Canterbury,[lower-alpha 16]
Central Cumberland.[lower-alpha 17]