Members of the New South Wales Legislative Assembly, 1922–1925

Members of the New South Wales Legislative Assembly who served in the 26th parliament of New South Wales held heir seats from 1922 to 1925. They were elected at the 1922 state election on 25 March 1922.[1][2] The Speaker was Daniel Levy.[3]</ref>[4]

Name Party Electorate Term in office'
David Anderson   Nationalist Ryde 1920–1930
Guy Arkins   Nationalist St George 1915–1930, 1938–1941
Richard Arthur   Nationalist North Shore 1904–1932
William Ashford[lower-alpha 2]   Independent Wammerawa 1910–1922
Jack Baddeley   Labor Newcastle 1922–1949
William Bagnall   Nationalist St George 1913–1925, 1925–1927
Jack Bailey   Labor/Independent[lower-alpha 3] Goulburn 1918–1925
Richard Ball   Nationalist Murray 1895–1898, 1904–1937
Thomas Bavin   Nationalist Ryde 1917–1935
Walter Bennett   Nationalist Maitland 1889–1902, 1917–1934
John Birt   Labor Sydney 1919–1925
Albert Bruntnell   Nationalist Parramatta 1906–1907, 1910–1913, 1919–1929
Michael Bruxner   Progressive Northern Tablelands 1920–1962
Frank Burke   Labor Botany 1917–1944
Ernest Buttenshaw   Progressive Murrumbidgee 1917–1938
William Cameron   Nationalist Maitland 1918–1931
George Cann   Labor St George 1914–1927
Frank Chaffey   Nationalist Namoi 1913–1940
Joseph Clark[lower-alpha 2]   Labor Wammerawa 1920–1927, 1930–1932
Sir Arthur Cocks[lower-alpha 4]   Nationalist North Shore 1910–1925
Hugh Connell   Labor Newcastle 1920–1934
Magnus Cromarty   Nationalist Newcastle 1922–1925
Mat Davidson   Labor Sturt 1918–1949
Billy Davies   Labor Wollondilly 1917–1949
Brian Doe   Nationalist Sturt 1917–1927
James Dooley   Labor Bathurst 1907–1927
David Drummond   Progressive Northern Tablelands 1920–1949
Bill Dunn   Labor Wammerawa 1910–1911, 1911–1932, 1935–1950
Cyril Fallon   Democratic Eastern Suburbs 1922–1925
William Fell   Independent Coalitionist North Shore 1922–1927
Joseph Fitzgerald   Labor Oxley 1920–1927, 1930–1932
John Fitzpatrick   Nationalist Bathurst 1895–1904, 1907–1930
William FitzSimons   Nationalist Cumberland 1922–1926
Martin Flannery   Labor Murrumbidgee 1920–1932
Sir George Fuller   Nationalist Wollondilly 1889–1894, 1915–1928
Hyman Goldstein   Nationalist Eastern Suburbs 1922–1928
Mark Gosling   Labor St George 1920–1932
Robert Greig   Labor Ryde 1920–1927, 1941–1947
Arthur Grimm   Nationalist Murrumbidgee 1913–1925
Sir Thomas Henley   Nationalist Ryde 1904–1935
Theodore Hill   Nationalist Oxley 1920–1927
Ted Horsington[lower-alpha 5]   Labor Sturt 1922–1947
Tom Hoskins   Nationalist Western Suburbs 1913–1927
Joseph Jackson   Nationalist Sydney 1922–1956
Harold Jaques   Nationalist Eastern Suburbs 1920–1930
Tom Keegan   Labor Balmain 1910–1920, 1921–1935
Matthew Kilpatrick   Progressive Murray 1920–1941
Albert Lane   Nationalist Balmain 1922–1927
Jack Lang   Labor Parramatta 1913–1943, 1943–1946
Carlo Lazzarini   Labor Western Suburbs 1917–1952
John Lee   Nationalist Botany 1920–1930, 1932–1941
Daniel Levy   Nationalist Sydney 1901–1937
Thomas Ley   Nationalist St George 1917–1925
Peter Loughlin   Labor Cootamundra 1917–1927, 1932–1935
Edward Loxton   Nationalist Ryde 1920–1925
Hugh Main   Progressive Cootamundra 1922–1938
Alfred McClelland   Labor Northern Tablelands 1920–1927, 1930–1932
Greg McGirr   Labor/Young Australia[lower-alpha 6] Sydney 1913–1925
James McGirr   Labor Cootamundra 1922–1952
William McKell   Labor Botany 1917–1947
Edward McTiernan   Labor Western Suburbs 1920–1927
Patrick Minahan   Labor Sydney 1910–1917, 1920–1925, 1925–1927
William Missingham   Progressive Byron 1922–1933
Voltaire Molesworth   Labor Cumberland 1920–1925
Thomas Morrow   Nationalist Parramatta 1922–1925
Mark Morton   Nationalist Wollondilly 1901–1920, 1922–1938
Cecil Murphy   Labor North Shore 1920–1927
David Murray   Labor Newcastle 1921–1928
Thomas Mutch   Labor Botany 1917–1930, 1938–1941
George Nesbitt   Nationalist Byron 1913–1925
John Ness   Nationalist Western Suburbs 1922–1930, 1932–1938
Charles Oakes   Nationalist Eastern Suburbs 1901–1910, 1917–1925
William O'Brien   Labor Murray 1917–1925
Walter O'Hearn   Labor Maitland 1920–1932
Bob O'Halloran   Labor Eastern Suburbs 1920–1927, 1941–1947
Stephen Perdriau   Nationalist Byron 1920–1925
John Perkins   Nationalist Goulburn 1921–1926
John Quirk   Labor Balmain 1917–1938
Bill Ratcliffe   Labor Botany 1922–1932
Alfred Reid[lower-alpha 4]   Nationalist North Shore 1920–1922, 1925–1945
Sir Charles Rosenthal   Nationalist Bathurst 1922–1925
Thomas Rutledge   Progressive Goulburn 1920–1925
Patrick Scully[lower-alpha 7]   Labor Namoi 1920–1923
William Scully[lower-alpha 7]   Labor Namoi 1923–1932
Walter Skelton   Independent Newcastle 1922–1927
Robert Stopford   Nationalist Balmain 1922–1925
Robert Stuart-Robertson   Labor Balmain 1907–1933
Harold Thorby   Progressive Wammerawa 1922–1930
Roy Vincent   Progressive Oxley 1922–1953
Bruce Walker   Nationalist Cumberland 1917–1932
Walter Wearne   Nationalist Namoi 1917–1930
Reginald Weaver   Nationalist North Shore 1917–1925, 1927–1945
James Wilson   Nationalist Western Suburbs 1920–1925
Jabez Wright[lower-alpha 5]   Labor Sturt 1913–1920, 1921–1922

Under the provisions of the Parliamentary Elections (Casual Vacancies) Act, casual vacancies were filled by the next unsuccessful candidate on the departing member's party list. If an Independent member retired, the Clerk of the Assembly determined who would fill the vacancy based on the departing members voting record in questions of confidence.

  1. The changes to the composition of the house, in chronological order, were Ashford's election overturned, Wright died, Scully resigned, McGirr founded party Baily expelled from Labor, and Cocks resigned.<ref name=':6' group='lower-alpha'>North Shore Nationalist MLA Sir Arthur Cocks resigned on March 1925 to take the position of Agent-General. He was replaced by Alfred Reid on 24 March.

See also

References

  1. Green, Antony. "1922 District List". New South Wales Election Results 1856-2007. Parliament of New South Wales. Retrieved 8 May 2020.
  2. "Part 5B - Members returned for each electorate" (PDF). New South Wales Parliamentary Record. Parliament of New South Wales. Retrieved 20 April 2020.
  3. "Former members of the New South Wales Parliament, 1856–2006". New South Wales Parliament. Retrieved 4 December 2019.[lower-alpha 1]
  4. "Part Ten - Officers of Parliament" (PDF). NSW Parliamentary Record. Parliament of New South Wales. Retrieved 12 April 2020.
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