Members of the Australian House of Representatives, 1925–1928
This is a list of the members of the Australian House of Representatives in the 10th Australian Parliament, which was elected at the 1925 election on 14 November 1925. The incumbent Nationalist Party of Australia led by Prime Minister of Australia Stanley Bruce in power since 1922 with coalition partner the Country Party led by Earle Page defeated the opposition Australian Labor Party led by Matthew Charlton. The Nationalist won 11 seats, they did not take at the 1922 election, although five of them were held by Liberal Party members, who had joined the Nationalist government after Bruce became Prime Minister in February 1923.
Member | Party | Electorate | State | Term in office |
---|---|---|---|---|
Aubrey Abbott | Country | Gwydir | NSW | 1925–1929, 1931–1937 |
Frank Anstey | Labor | Bourke | Vic | 1910–1934 |
Hon Llewellyn Atkinson | Country | Wilmot | Tas | 1906–1929 |
James Bayley | Nationalist | Oxley | Qld | 1917–1931 |
George Bell | Nationalist | Darwin | Tas | 1919–1922, 1925–1943 |
Arthur Blakeley | Labor | Darling | NSW | 1917–1934 |
Hon Eric Bowden | Nationalist | Parramatta | NSW | 1906–1910, 1919–1929 |
Frank Brennan | Labor | Batman | Vic | 1911–1931, 1934–1949 |
Rt Hon Stanley Bruce | Nationalist | Flinders | Vic | 1918–1929, 1931–1933 |
Donald Charles Cameron | Nationalist | Brisbane | Qld | 1919–1931, 1934–1937 |
Malcolm Cameron | Nationalist | Barker | SA | 1922–1934 |
Hon Austin Chapman[1] | Nationalist | Eden-Monaro | NSW | 1901–1926 |
Matthew Charlton | Labor | Hunter | NSW | 1910–1928 |
Percy Coleman | Labor | Reid | NSW | 1922–1931 |
Robert Cook | Country | Indi | Vic | 1919–1928 |
Bernard Corser[2] | Country | Wide Bay | Qld | 1928–1954 |
Edward Corser[2] | Nationalist | Wide Bay | Qld | 1915–1928 |
Jack Duncan-Hughes | Nationalist | Boothby | SA | 1922–1928, 1931–1938 (S), 1940–1943 |
James Fenton | ALP | Maribyrnong | Vic | 1910–1934 |
Frank Forde | Labor | Capricornia | Qld | 1922–1946 |
Richard Foster | Nationalist | Wakefield | SA | 1909–1928 |
Grosvenor Francis | Nationalist | Kennedy | Qld | 1925–1929 |
Josiah Francis | Nationalist | Moreton | Qld | 1922–1955 |
Sydney Gardner | Nationalist | Robertson | NSW | 1922–1940 |
Sir John Gellibrand | Nationalist | Denison | Tas | 1925–1928 |
Hon William Gibson | Country | Corangamite | Vic | 1918–1929, 1931–1934 |
Albert Green | Labor | Kalgoorlie | WA | 1922–1940 |
Roland Green | Country | Richmond | NSW | 1922–1937 |
Hon Henry Gregory | Country | Swan | WA | 1913–1940 |
Hon Sir Littleton Groom | Nationalist | Darling Downs | Qld | 1901–1929, 1931–1936 |
Henry Gullett | Nationalist | Henty | Vic | 1925–1940 |
Hon William Hill | Country | Echuca | Vic | 1919–1934 |
Hon Sir Neville Howse | Nationalist | Calare | NSW | 1922–1929 |
Rt Hon Billy Hughes | Nationalist | North Sydney | NSW | 1901–1952 |
James Hunter | Country | Maranoa | Qld | 1921–1940 |
Geoffry Hurry | Nationalist | Bendigo | Vic | 1922–1929 |
Syd Jackson | Nationalist | Bass | Tas | 1919–1929 |
Hon Sir Elliot Johnson | Nationalist | Lang | NSW | 1903–1928 |
William Killen | Country | Riverina | NSW | 1922–1931 |
Andrew Lacey | Labor | Grey | SA | 1922–1931 |
William Lambert | Labor | West Sydney | NSW | 1921–1928 |
Hon John Latham | Nationalist | Kooyong | Vic | 1922–1934 |
Bert Lazzarini | Labor | Werriwa | NSW | 1919–1931, 1934–1952 |
Hon Thomas Ley | Nationalist | Barton | NSW | 1925–1928 |
John Lister | Nationalist | Corio | Vic | 1917–1929 |
George Mackay | Nationalist | Lilley | Qld | 1917–1934 |
William Mahony[3] | Labor | Dalley | NSW | 1915–1927 |
Norman Makin | Labor | Hindmarsh | SA | 1919–1946, 1954–1963 |
William Maloney | Labor | Melbourne | Vic | 1904–1940 |
Edward Mann | Nationalist | Perth | WA | 1922–1929 |
Arthur Manning | Nationalist | Macquarie | NSW | 1922–1928 |
Walter Marks | Nationalist | Wentworth | NSW | 1919–1931 |
Hon Charles Marr | Nationalist | Parkes | NSW | 1919–1929, 1931–1943 |
James Mathews | Labor | Melbourne Ports | Vic | 1906–1931 |
George Maxwell | Nationalist | Fawkner | Vic | 1917–1935 |
Charles McGrath | Labor | Ballaarat | Vic | 1913–1919, 1920–1934 |
Parker Moloney | Labor | Hume | NSW | 1910–1913, 1914–1917, 1919–1931 |
Harold George Nelson[4] | Labor | Northern Territory | NT | 1922–1934 |
Lewis Nott | Nationalist | Herbert | Qld | 1925–1928, 1949–1951 |
Hon Sir Earle Page | Country | Cowper | NSW | 1919–1961 |
Archdale Parkhill[5] | Nationalist | Warringah | NSW | 1927–1937 |
Walter Parsons | Nationalist | Angas | SA | 1925–1929 |
Hon Thomas Paterson | Country | Gippsland | Vic | 1922–1943 |
John Perkins[1] | Nationalist | Eden-Monaro | NSW | 1926–1929, 1931–1943 |
Graham Pratten[6] | Nationalist | Martin | NSW | 1928–1929 |
Hon Herbert Pratten[6] | Nationalist | Martin | NSW | 1921–1928 |
John Prowse | Country | Forrest | WA | 1919–1943 |
Edward Charles Riley | Labor | Cook | NSW | 1922–1934 |
Edward Riley | Labor | South Sydney | NSW | 1910–1931 |
Hon Arthur Rodgers | Nationalist | Wannon | Vic | 1913–1922, 1925–1929 |
Hon Sir Granville Ryrie[5] | Nationalist | Warringah | NSW | 1911–1927 |
James Scullin | Labor | Yarra | Vic | 1910–1913, 1922–1949 |
Alfred Seabrook | Nationalist | Franklin | Tas | 1922–1928 |
Hon Percy Stewart | Independent | Wimmera | Vic | 1919–1931 |
Hon Ted Theodore[3] | Labor | Dalley | NSW | 1927–1931 |
Victor Thompson | Country | New England | NSW | 1922–1940 |
Hon David Watkins | Labor | Newcastle | NSW | 1901–1935 |
William Watson | Independent | Fremantle | WA | 1922–1928, 1931–1934 |
Rt Hon William Watt | Nationalist | Balaclava | Vic | 1914–1929 |
John West | Labor | East Sydney | NSW | 1910–1931 |
George Edwin Yates | Labor | Adelaide | SA | 1914–1919, 1922–1931 |
Notes
- Nationalist member Austin Chapman died on 12 January 1926; Nationalist Party candidate John Perkins won the resulting by-election on 6 March.
- Nationalist Party member Edward Corser died on 31 July 1928; his son, Country Party candidate Bernard Corser won the resulting by-election on 3 September.
- ALP member William Mahony resigned on 18 January 1927; Labor candidate Ted Theodore won the resulting by-election on 26 February.
- At this time, the member for the Northern Territory could only vote on matters relating to the Northern Territory.
- Nationalist member Granville Ryrie resigned on 13 May 1927 to be appointed Australian High Commissioner to the United Kingdom; Nationalist Party candidate Archdale Parkhill won the resulting by-election on 21 May.
- Nationalist member Herbert Pratten died on 7 May 1928; his nephew, Nationalist Party candidate Graham Pratten won the resulting by-election on 16 June.
References
- Votes and Proceedings of the House of Representatives during the session of the Tenth Parliament. Parliament of Australia. 1928.
- "Members of the House of Representatives since 1901". Parliamentary Handbook. Parliament of Australia. Archived from the original on 25 July 2008. Retrieved 17 November 2008.
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