This is a list of members of the South Australian Legislative Council from 1869 to 1873.
This was the fourth Legislative Council to be elected under the Constitution of 1856, which provided for a house consisting of eighteen members to be elected from the whole colony acting as one electoral district "The Province"; that six members, selected by lot, should be replaced at General Elections after four years, another six to be replaced four years later and thenceforth each member should have a term of twelve years.[1][2][3]
Seven seats were contested – six by the "effluxion of time" (Baker, Barrow, Elder, English, Everard and Peacock) and one to replace Charles Hervey Bagot, who resigned the previous December.[4]
Name | Time in office | Term expires | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Henry Ayers | 1857–1888 1888–1893 |
Feb. 1873 | |
John Tuthill Bagot | 1866–1870 | Feb. 1877 | |
John Baker | 1851–1861 1863–1872 |
Feb. 1869 | died 1872 |
John Henry Barrow | 1861–1871 | Feb. 1869 | resigned September 1871 |
John Crozier | 1867–1887 | Feb. 1877 | |
John Dunn | 1869–1877 | Feb. 1877 | |
Thomas Elder | 1863–1869 1871–1878 |
Feb. 1869 | elected October 1871 |
Thomas English | 1865–1878 1882–1885 |
Feb. 1869 | |
John Hodgkiss | 1866–1872 1878–1884 |
Feb. 1877 | |
Thomas Hogarth | 1866–1885 | Feb. 1873 | |
Henry Mildred | 1866–1873 | Feb. 1873 | |
William Milne | 1869–1881 | Feb. 1881 | |
William Morgan | 1867–1884 | Feb. 1877 | |
John Morphett | 1851–1873 | Feb. 1873 | |
Alexander Borthwick Murray | 1869–1877 | Feb. 1877 | |
John Bentham Neales | 1872–1873 | elected July 1872; died 1873 | |
William Parkin | 1866–1877 | Feb. 1877 | |
Philip Santo | 1871–1881 | Feb. 1881 | elected October 1871 |
Emanuel Solomon | 1867–1871 | Feb. 1877 | resigned September 1871 |
William Storrie | 1871–1878 | elected October 1871 | |
Augustine Stow | 1869–1871 | resigned September 1871 | |
William Wedd Tuxford | 1865–1873 | Feb. 1873 |
References
edit- ^ "Colonial Constitutions". South Australian Register. Adelaide. 16 March 1857. p. 2. Retrieved 28 August 2014 – via National Library of Australia.
- ^ "The New Parliament". South Australian Register. Adelaide. 26 March 1857. p. 2. Retrieved 27 August 2014 – via National Library of Australia.
- ^ "Our First Parliament". The Advertiser. Adelaide. 8 March 1930. p. 15. Retrieved 28 August 2014 – via National Library of Australia.
- ^ "The Session". South Australian Register. Adelaide. 1 February 1869. p. 2. Retrieved 15 September 2014 – via National Library of Australia.