Members of the Tasmanian House of Assembly, 1909–1912

This is a list of members of the Tasmanian House of Assembly between the 30 April 1909 election and the 30 April 1912 election.

A redistribution in 1907 resulted in the abolition of all of the single-member seats and the adoption of the five federal electorates which had been created for Tasmania, and used the Hare-Clark proportional representation system to elect six members to each of the seats. The 1909 election was the point at which these changes took effect.

One major result was the formation of parties—prior to 1909, members other than those pledged to the Labor Party had adopted loose and flexible affiliations, generally being known as "Ministerialist", "Oppositionist/Liberal" or "Independent". A coalition of former Ministerialists, Independents and Liberals formed the Anti-Socialist Party (which became the Liberal Party of Tasmania in 1912), while another group of Oppositionists formed the Liberal Democrat Party.

The second major result was the product of the election itself—the near-complete destruction of the former Liberal grouping which had originally formed around Sir Edward Braddon and Andrew Inglis Clark, and the considerable rise in the fortunes of the Labor Party. They gained 12 seats in the new Assembly, and for the first time in Tasmania's history, held government for a week in October 1909 under Premier John Earle.

Name Party Division Years in office
Thomas BakhapAnti-SocialistBass1909–1913
James BeltonLaborDarwin1909–1931
Jonathan BestAnti-SocialistWilmot1894–1897; 1899–1912; 1913
Edward CrowtherAnti-SocialistDenison1878–1912
John DaviesAnti-SocialistDenison1884–1913
David DickerLaborFranklin1909–1922
John EarleLaborFranklin1906–1917
John EvansAnti-SocialistFranklin1897–1937
Norman EwingAnti-SocialistFranklin1909–1915
Richard FieldAnti-SocialistWilmot1909–1912
James GuyLaborBass1909–1913
Herbert Hays[3]Anti-SocialistWilmot1911–1922
Alexander HeanAnti-SocialistFranklin1903–1913; 1916–1925
Thomas HodgmanAnti-SocialistFranklin1900–1912
John Hope[3]Anti-SocialistWilmot1900–1911
Charles HowroydLaborBass1906–1917
James Hurst[1]LaborDarwin1910–1912; 1919–1926
Jens Jensen[2]LaborWilmot1903–1910; 1922–1925;
1928–1934
Walter LeeAnti-SocialistWilmot1909–1946
Elliott LewisAnti-SocialistDenison1886–1903; 1909–1922
James Long[1]LaborDarwin1903–1910
Joseph LyonsLaborWilmot1909–1929
Richard McKenzieAnti-SocialistBass1906–1913
Edward Mulcahy[2]Anti-SocialistWilmot1891–1903; 1910–1919
James OgdenLaborDarwin1906–1922
Herbert PayneAnti-SocialistDarwin1903–1920
Frederick RattleAnti-SocialistDenison1903–1912
Robert SadlerLiberal DemocratBass1900–1912; 1913–1922
William SheridanLaborDenison1909–1913; 1914–1928
Albert SolomonAnti-SocialistBass1909–1914
Benjamin WatkinsLaborDarwin1906–1917; 1919–1922;
1925–1934
Joshua WhitsittAnti-SocialistDarwin1909–1922
Walter WoodsLaborDenison1906–1917; 1925–1931

Notes

1 On 28 February 1910, Darwin Labor MHA James Long resigned to contest a seat in the Australian Senate. Labor candidate James Hurst replaced him on 8 June 1910.
2 On 25 February 1910, Wilmot Labor MHA Jens Jensen resigned to contest the Bass seat in the federal House of Representatives. Anti-Socialist candidate Edward Mulcahy replaced him on 8 June 1910.
3 On 14 April 1911, Wilmot Anti-Socialist MHA John Hope resigned to contest the Legislative Council seat of Meander, which he won on 2 May 1911. Anti-Socialist candidate Herbert Hays replaced him on 8 June 1911.

Sources

  • Hughes, Colin A.; Graham, B. D. (1976). Voting for the South Australian, Western Australian and Tasmanian Lower Houses, 1890-1964. Canberra: Australian National University. ISBN 0-7081-1334-6.
  • Parliament of Tasmania (2006). The Parliament of Tasmania from 1856
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