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Central District No. 1 (South Australian Legislative Council)

Central District No. 1 was an electoral district for the South Australian Legislative Council from 1913 until 1975. It was created by the Constitution Act Further Amendment Act 1913, which divided the Central District into two districts, each to elect four members. The size of the Legislative Council was to remain at 18 until the next general election, and increase to 20 by adding a new member for each of the two new districts. From its creation until the next general election (which was held on 27 March 1915), Central District No. 1 comprised the extant Assembly districts of Adelaide and Port Adelaide. The act also redrew the Assembly electoral districts from the next election. From then, Central District No. 1 would comprise the new Assembly districts of Adelaide, North Adelaide, Port Adelaide and West Torrens.[1]

Members

The Constitution Act Further Amendment Act provided that the six sitting members for Central District should decide amongst themselves which three represented each of the two new districts. The three who represented Central District No. 1 were James Jelley, John Vaughan and James Phillips Wilson.[2]

Date of change[3] Member Member member Member
At formation (three members) James Phillips Wilson John Vaughan James Jelley (re-elected 1921, 1927)
12 March 1915 John Carr (re-elected 1921, 1927)
6 April 1918 Andrew Alexander Kirkpatrick (re-elected 1924) Thomas Gluyas (re-elected 1924, 1930)
9 and 16 April 1921
5 April 1924
26 March 1927
27 October 1928 Frank Condon (re-elected 1930, 1938, 1944, 1950, 1956)
17 August 1929 Stanley Whitford (re-elected 1933)
5 April 1930
24 October 1931 Joseph Anderson (re-elected 1938)
8 April 1933 Edgar Alfred Oates (re-elected 1941, 1947)
19 March 1938
29 March 1941 Kenneth Edward Joseph Bardolph (re-elected 1947, 1953, 1959)
29 April 1944 Albert Alfred Hoare (re-elected 1950)
8 March 1947
4 March 1950
24 October 1951 Stan Bevan (re-elected 1953, 1959, 1965)
7 March 1953
3 March 1956 Albert James Shard (re-elected 1962, 1968)
7 March 1959
16 September 1961 Frank Kneebone (re-elected 1962, 1968)
3 March 1962
6 March 1965 Donald Hubert Louis Banfield (re-elected 1973)
2 March 1968
15 May 1970 Tom Casey (re-elected 1973)
10 March 1973

References

  1. ^ The Constitution Further Amendment Act ( sa)
  2. ^ "LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL". The Register (Adelaide). Vol. LXXIX, no. 20, 958. South Australia. 13 January 1914. p. 7. Retrieved 14 December 2018 – via National Library of Australia.
  3. ^ "Statistical Record of the Legislature 1836-2007: SA Parliament" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 12 March 2011. Retrieved 14 December 2018.

34°54′28″S 138°36′5″E / 34.90778°S 138.60139°E / -34.90778; 138.60139