Members of the Victorian Legislative Assembly, 1861–1864

This is a list of members of the Victorian Legislative Assembly in Australia from the elections of 2–19 August 1861 to the elections of October–November 1864.[1]

Victorian Legislative Assembly districts, 1859-1877
Note the "Term in Office" refers to that members term(s) in the Assembly, not necessarily for that electorate.
NameElectorateTerm in Office
Robert S. H. AndersonEmerald Hill1858–1864
Butler Cole AspinallGeelong East1856–1864; 1866–1870
Kenric BrodribbSt Kilda1861–1864
William Brodribb [a]Brighton1861–1862
John Henry BrookeGeelong West1856–1864
Robert BennettEast Bourke1856–1857; 1859–1864
Graham BerryCollingwood1861–1865; 1869–1886; 1892–1897
James Casey [d]Sandhurst1861–1862; 1863–1880
John CathieBallaarat East1859–1864
Henry Samuel Chapman [b]Mornington1858–1859; 1861–1862
James Chapman [c]Castlemaine1860–1861
Edward CohenEast Melbourne1861–1865; 1868–1877
Patrick Costello [e]North Melbourne1861
Michael James CumminsSouth Grant1861–1864
Benjamin George DaviesAvoca1861–1880
John DaviesNorth Melbourne1861–1864
William Denovan [f]Sandhurst1861–1862
Charles Jardine DonCollingwood1859–1864
Charles Gavan DuffyVilliers and Heytesbury1856–1864; 1867–1874; 1876–1880
John EdwardsCollingwood1861–1867
John Everard [g]North Gippsland1858–1859; 1861; 1864;
1868–1871; 1874
Daniel Ratcliffe Flint [h]Ararat1861–1862
Nicholas FoottGeelong West1860–1868
James FrancisRichmond1859–1874; 1878–1884
William FrazerCreswick1859–1870
Robert Gillespie [i]Grenville1859–1862
Duncan GilliesBallaarat West1861–1868; 1870–1877;
1877–1894; 1897–1903
James Macpherson GrantAvoca1856–1870; 1871–1885
Wilson Gray [j]Rodney1860–1862
William HainesPortland1856–1858; 1860–1864
Richard HealesEast Bourke Boroughs1857–1864
George Hedley [k]South Gippsland1861–1862
John HoodBelfast1859–1864
John HoustonCrowlands1859–1865
John HumffrayBallaarat East1856–1864; 1868–1871
Richard Davies Ireland [l]Villiers and Heytesbury1857–1864; 1866–1867
Richard Davies Ireland [m]Maryborough1857–1864; 1866–1867
James JohnstonSt Kilda1859–1864
William Jones [n]Evelyn1860–1863
George KirkEast Bourke1861–1864
Ambrose KyteEast Melbourne1861–1865; 1867–1867
Peter LalorSouth Grant1856–1871; 1874–1889
Thomas LambertRichmond1861–1864
George LeveyNormanby1861–1867
Nathaniel LeviMaryborough1861–1865; 1866–1867
Thomas LoaderWest Melbourne1859–1864
John MacadamCastlemaine1859–1861; 1861–1864
William Nelson McCannSouth Grant1861–1867
Robert MacDonaldCreswick1861–1864
William McLellanArarat1859–1877; 1883–1897
Charles MacMahonWest Bourke1861–1864; 1866–1878; 1880–1886
Thomas Manifold [o]Warrnambool1861
William MollisonDundas1858–1858; 1859–1864
Francis MurphyMurray Boroughs1856–1865; 1866–1871
William NicholsonSandridge1859–1864
William Nixon [p]Polwarth & South Grenville1861–1863
Alfred Arthur O'ConnorGrenville1861–1864
Michael O'GradySouth Bourke1861–1868; 1870–1876
James OrkneyWest Melbourne1861–1864; 1880–1885
John O'ShanassyKilmore1856–1865; 1877–1883
John Downes Owens [q]Mandurang1856–1859; 1861–1863
Vincent Pyke [r]Castlemaine1856–1857; 1859–1862
John RamsayMaldon1861–1867
David Reid [s]The Murray1859–1862
John RichardsonGeelong East1861–1876
John Carre RiddellWest Bourke1860–1877
James Service [t]Ripon and Hampden1857–1862; 1874–1881; 1883–1886
John SmithWest Bourke1856–1879
Louis SmithSouth Bourke1859–1865; 1871–1874; 1877–1880;
1880–1883; 1886–1894
William Collard Smith [u]Ballaarat West1861–1864; 1871–1892; 1894–1894
Peter SnodgrassDalhousie1856–1867
James Forester SullivanMandurang1861–1871; 1874–1876
Robert Braithwaite TuckerKyneton Boroughs1861–1867
George Frederic VerdonWilliamstown1859–1868
William Charles WeekesOvens1861–1864
Samuel WilsonWimmera1861–1864
John WoodsCrowlands1859–1864; 1871–1892
Peter WrightOvens1861–1864; 1877–1880; 1886–1889
a Brodribb resigned in March 1862; replaced by George Higinbotham in an April 1862 by-election
b H. Chapman resigned in February 1862; replaced by James McCulloch in a March 1862 by-election
c J. Chapman was disqualified in October 1861; replaced by Alexander John Smith in a November 1861 by-election
d Casey was unseated on petition in March 1862;[2] replaced by Robert Frederick Howard in a March 1862 by-election
e Costello was expelled in November 1861; replaced by John Sinclair in a November 1861 by-election[3]
f Denovan resigned in July 1862; replaced by Robert Strickland in a November 1862 by-election
g Everard was disqualified in August 1861 (insolvent); replaced by George Mackay in an August 1861 by-election. Mackay resigned in April 1864; replaced in turn by Everard in an April 1864 by-election
h Flint resigned March 1862; replaced by Tharp Girdlestone in an April 1862 by-election
i Gillespie resigned in March 1862; replaced by Mark Morrell Pope in a March 1862 by-election
j Gray resigned in September 1862; replaced by John MacGregor in a November 1862 by-election
k Hedley resigned in October 1862; replaced by John Johnson in a November 1862 by-election
l Ireland resigned in April 1864; replaced by Samuel MacGregor in a May 1864 by-election
m Ireland won both Maryborough and "Villiers and Heytesbury",[4] he resigned from the former; replaced by George S. Evans in an October 1861 by-election
n Jones resigned in March 1863; replaced by John Thompson in an April 1863 by-election
o Manifold resigned in November 1861; replaced by John Wood in an December 1861 by-election
p Nixon left the Assembly in July 1863; replaced by Archibald Michie sworn-in August 1863
q Owens resigned around July 1863; replaced by James Joseph Casey sworn-in August 1863
r Pyke resigned in June 1862; replaced by George Allen Smyth in a November 1862 by-election
s Reid was disqualified in May 1862; replaced by John Orr in a March 1862 by-election
t Service resigned around August 1862; replaced by George Morton in a November by-election
u W. Smith resigned in January 1864; replaced by Robert Lewis sworn-in February 1864; Lewis resigned c. July 1864

References

  1. "Elections since 1856". Parliament of Victoria. Retrieved 3 February 2014.
  2. Mennell, Philip (1892). "Casey, Hon. James Joseph" . The Dictionary of Australasian Biography. London: Hutchinson & Co via Wikisource.
  3. "Legislative Assembly". The Argus. Melbourne, Vic. 27 November 1861.
  4. "The Victorian Parliament". The Argus. Trove. 31 August 1861. Retrieved 7 February 2014.
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