Members of the Tasmanian House of Assembly, 1928–1931

This is a list of members of the Tasmanian House of Assembly between the 30 May 1928 election and the 9 May 1931 election. The 1928 election failed to deliver a majority, and the Nationalists' John McPhee took over from Labor's Joseph Lyons as Premier of Tasmania. Lyons subsequently retired from state politics, obtaining election to the Federal seat of Wilmot and going on to become Prime Minister of Australia in 1931.

Name Party Division Years in office
Henry BakerNationalistFranklin1928–1946
George BeckerLaborBass1912–1931; 1934–1941
James BeltonLaborDarwin1909–1931
Percy BestNationalistWilmot1928–1931
Neil CampbellNationalistWilmot1922–1955
Robert CosgroveLaborDenison1919–1922; 1925–1931;
1934–1958
Thomas Davies[2]LaborBass1929–1942
Edmund Dwyer-GrayLaborDenison1928–1945
John EvansNationalistFranklin1897–1937
Charles GrantNationalistDenison1922–1925; 1928–1932
Allan Guy[2]LaborBass1916–1929
Edward HobbsNationalistDarwin1916–1934
Claude JamesNationalistBass1925–1937
Jens JensenLaborWilmot1903–1910; 1922–1925;
1928–1934
Philip KellyLaborDarwin1922–1946
Walter LeeNationalistWilmot1909–1946
Joseph Lyons[1]LaborWilmot1909–1929
Henry McFieNationalistDarwin1925–1934; 1941–1948
John McPheeNationalistDenison1919–1934; 1941–1946
Frank MarriottNationalistDarwin1922–1946
Fergus MedwinLabor/IndependentDarwin1928–1931
John OckerbyNationalistBass1928–1946
Albert OgilvieLaborFranklin1919–1939
Eric OgilvieLaborWilmot1928–1940
Benjamin PearsallIndependentFranklin1928–1931; 1934–1937
John PiggottNationalistFranklin1922–1931
Victor ShawLaborBass1925–1936
William Shoobridge[1]LaborWilmot1916–1919; 1922–1928;
1929–1931
John SoundyNationalistDenison1925–1946
Henry ThomsonNationalistBass1925–1931
Benjamin WatkinsLabor/IndependentFranklin1906–1917; 1919–1922;
1925–1934
Walter WoodsLaborDenison1906–1917; 1925–1931

Notes

1 Labor MHA for Wilmot, Joseph Lyons, resigned to contest the federal seat of Wilmot at the 1929 election. A recount on 27 September 1929 resulted in Labor candidate William Shoobridge being elected.
2 Labor MHA for Bass, Allan Guy, resigned to contest the federal seat of Bass. Due to the ballot papers from the previous election having been lost in a flood, some delays were encountered, but the Nationalists did not nominate a candidate, and Thomas Davies was declared elected on 5 October 1929.

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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