This is a list of members of the Victorian Legislative Council, as appointed to the inaugural Council of 1851 or elected at the 1851 election.
From 1851 to 1856 the original Legislative Council was unicameral (a single chamber) and consisted of Electoral districts.[1] From 1856 onwards, the Victorian parliament consisted of two houses, the Victorian Legislative Council (upper house, consisting of Provinces) and the Victorian Legislative Assembly (lower house).[2]
Name | Type | Electoral district[1] (or office) | Term of Office |
---|---|---|---|
Redmond Barry[a] | office-bearing nominee | (Solicitor-General) | 1851–1852 |
William Campbell | elected | Loddon | 1851–1854, 1862–1882 |
Charles Dight[b] | elected | North Bourke | 1851–1852 |
Alexander Dunlop[c] | nominee | — |
1851–1852 |
Charles Ebden[d] | office-bearing nominee | (Auditor-General) | 1851–1852 |
John Fawkner | elected | Talbot, Dalhousie and Anglesey | 1851–1869 |
Adolphus Goldsmith | elected | Ripon, Hampden, Grenville and Polwarth | 1851–1853 |
Charles Griffith[e] | nominee | — |
1851–1852, 1853–1856 |
William Haines[f] | nominee | — |
1851–1852, 1853–1856, 1865–1866 |
James Johnston[g] | elected | City of Melbourne | 1851–1852 |
William Lonsdale | office-bearing nominee | (Colonial Secretary) | 1851–1853 |
John Mercer[h] | elected | Grant | 1851–1852 |
Henry Miller | elected | South Bourke, Evelyn and Mornington | 1851–1866 |
Francis Murphy | elected | Murray | 1851–1853, 1853–1856, 1872–1876 |
Thomas Osborne[i] | elected | Belfast and Warrnambool | 1851–1852 |
John O'Shanassy | elected | City of Melbourne | 1851–1856, 1868–1874 |
James Palmer | elected | Normanby, Dundas and Follett | 1851–1870 |
Robert Pohlman | office-bearing nominee | (Master in Equity) | 1851–1854, 1855–1856 |
Robert Robinson[j] | elected | Geelong | 1851–1852 |
James Ross[k] | nominee | — |
1851–1852 |
Andrew Russell | nominee | — |
1851–1856 |
William Rutledge | elected | Villiers and Heytesbury | 1851–1854 |
John Smith | elected | North Bourke | 1851–1856 |
Peter Snodgrass | elected | Kilmore, Kyneton and Seymour | 1851–1856 |
William Splatt | elected | Wimmera | 1851–1854 |
William Stawell | office-bearing nominee | (Attorney-General) | 1851–1856 |
James Strachan | elected | Geelong | 1851–1866, 1866–1874 |
Robert Turnbull | elected | Gipps' Land | 1851–1853, 1864–1872 |
William Westgarth | elected | City of Melbourne | 1851–1853 |
Thomas Wilkinson | elected | Portland | 1851–1856 |
- a Redmond Barry resigned June 1852, replaced as Solicitor-General from 13 April 1852 by Edward Williams.[3] Williams was replaced by James Croke from 21 July 1852.[3]
- b Dight died 9 October 1852, replaced by William Nicholson, by-election November 1852
- c Dunlop died 21 June 1852, replaced by Joseph Anderson on 14 July 1852[4][5]
- d Ebden resigned October 1852, replaced by Hugh Childers, from 26 October 1852.[4][6]
- e Griffith resigned June 1852, replaced by John Riddell on 21 June 1852[5]
- f Haines resigned August 1852, replaced by Archibald Michie on 26 October 1852[7]
- g Johnston resigned December 1852; replaced by Augustus Greeves, by-election January 1853
- h Mercer resigned December 1852; replaced by John Myles, by-election December 1852
- i Osborne resigned December 1852; replaced by Lauchlan Mackinnon, by-election December 1852
- j Robinson died 14 May 1852; replaced by Alexander Thomson, by-election June 1852
- k Ross resigned July 1852, replaced by Thomas Turner à Beckett, nominee, from 14 July 1852[4][5]
References
edit- ^ a b "Victorian Electoral Act" (PDF). New South Wales Government. 1851. Retrieved 17 May 2013.
- ^ Sweetman, Edward (1920). Constitutional Development of Victoria, 1851-6. Whitcombe & Tombs Limited. p. 182. Retrieved 17 May 2013.
- ^ a b "Statistical Register of the State of Victoria" (PDF). 1908.
- ^ a b c Labilliere, Francis Peter (1878). "Early History of the Colony of Victoria". Retrieved 25 June 2014.
- ^ a b c Sweetman 1920, p.169
- ^ "Childers, Hugh Culling Eardley". Re-Member: a database of all Victorian MPs since 1851. Parliament of Victoria. Archived from the original on 23 April 2023. Retrieved 28 August 2022.
- ^ Sweetman 1920, p.170
- "Re-Member (Former Members)". Parliament of Victoria. Retrieved 17 June 2021.