Members of the Tasmanian House of Assembly, 1903–1906

This is a list of members of the Tasmanian House of Assembly between the 2 April 1903 election and the 29 March 1906 election.

The Hare-Clark system being trialled in Hobart and Launceston came to an end at the 1903 election, and several seats in the rural region between the two centres either merged or changed substantially. Possibly the most significant result was the failure of the Premier of Tasmania, Elliott Lewis, to win a seat—formerly the member for abolished Richmond, he ran for the new Central Hobart seat, and was beaten by Herbert Nicholls, an opposition backbencher with only two years' parliamentary experience, by a substantial margin. The election also saw an increased participation by the fledgling Labor Party, which won four of the six seats it contested, all of which were in mining areas of the state. Future Labor premier John Earle was beaten in Waratah by four votes, whilst future federal MHR Jens Jensen and senator James Long also commenced their parliamentary careers.

Name Party District Years in office
Charles AllenLiberalWestbury1903–1909
William BatchelorLiberal/IndependentNorth Launceston1903–1906
William BennettLiberal/MinisterialCambria1889–1893; 1903–1909
Jonathan BestLiberal/IndependentDeloraine1894–1897; 1899–1912; 1913
Stafford Bird[5]MinisterialSouth Hobart1882–1903; 1904–1909
Frank BondLiberal/MinisterialEast Hobart1903–1906; 1909–1921
George Brettingham-MooreLiberalWest Hobart1903–1909
Julian BrownMinisterial/IndependentNew Norfolk1903–1906
Nicholas John Brown[2]MinisterialCumberland1875–1903
William BrownellLiberal/MinisterialFranklin1903–1909
George BurnsLaborQueenstown1903–1906
Edward CrowtherMinisterialQueenborough1878–1912
John DaviesIndependentFingal1884–1913
Henry Dumaresq[1]MinisterialLongford1886–1903
Henry DumbletonIndependent/MinisterialDevonport1903–1906
John EvansMinisterialKingborough1897–1937
John GibsonLiberal/IndependentNorth Esk1903–1906
George GilmoreLiberal/MinisterialWaratah1893–1900; 1903–1906
Alexander HeanLiberal/MinisterialSorell1903–1913; 1916–1925
Thomas HodgmanLiberal/MinisterialMonmouth1900–1912
John HopeMinisterialKentish1900–1911
Jens JensenLaborGeorge Town1903–1910; 1922–1925;
1928–1934
William LamertonLabor/Ind.LaborZeehan1903–1906
James Long[4]LaborLyell1903–1910
Carmichael LyneLiberalRingarooma1900–1906
Sir John McCallLiberalWest Devon1888–1893; 1901–1909
Charles MackenzieMinisterialWellington1886–1909
Henry MurrayLiberalLatrobe1891–1900; 1902–1909
Herbert NichollsLiberalCentral Hobart1900–1909
Robert Patterson[5]MinisterialSouth Hobart1900–1904
Herbert PayneLiberalBurnie1903–1920
William PropstingLiberalNorth Hobart1899–1905
Frederick RattleLiberal/MinisterialGlenorchy1903–1912
Matthew Robinson[3]Liberal/IndependentWest Launceston1903–1906
Robert SadlerLiberalCentral Launceston1900–1912; 1913–1922
David Storrer[3]LiberalWest Launceston1902–1903
Charles StewartLiberal/MinisterialEast Launceston1903–1909
John Wood[2]MinisterialCumberland1903–1909
Alfred Youl[1]MinisterialLongford1903–1909

Notes

1 On 12 May 1903, the Ministerial member for Longford, Henry Dumaresq, resigned. Ministerial candidate Alfred Youl was elected unopposed.
2 On 22 September 1903, the Ministerial member for Cumberland and Speaker of the House, Nicholas John Brown, died. Ministerial candidate John Wood won the resulting by-election on 9 October 1903.
3 In November 1903, the Liberal member for West Launceston, David Storrer, resigned to contest the Federal seat of Bass against William Hartnoll, who Storrer had replaced in the Assembly the previous year. Liberal candidate Matthew Robinson won the resulting by-election on 10 December 1903.
4 In July 1904, the Labor member for Lyell, James Long, resigned. He was returned unopposed on 13 July 1904.
5 In July 1904, the Ministerial member for South Hobart, Robert Patterson, resigned. Ministerial candidate Stafford Bird won the resulting by-election on 30 July 1904.

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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