Members of the South Australian Legislative Council, 1924–1927
This is a list of members of the South Australian Legislative Council from 1924 to 1927
Name | District | Party | Term expiry | Time in office |
---|---|---|---|---|
Percy Blesing [1] | Northern | Country Party | 1927 | 1924–1949 |
John Carr | Central No. 1 | Labor | 1927 | 1915–1929 |
John Herbert Cooke | Central No. 2 | Liberal | 1927 | 1915–1933 |
John Cowan | Southern | Liberal | 1930 | 1910–1944 |
Walter Gordon Duncan | Midland | Liberal | 1930 | 1918–1962 |
Tom Gluyas | Central No. 1 | Labor | 1930 | 1918–1931 |
David Gordon | Midland | Liberal | 1930 | 1913–1944 |
Walter Hannaford | Midland | Liberal | 1927 | 1912–1941 |
William Humphrey Harvey | Central No. 2 | Liberal | 1930 | 1915–1935 |
James Jelley | Central No. 1 | Labor | 1927 | 1912–1933 |
Andrew Kirkpatrick | Central No. 1 | Labor | 1930 | 1891–1897, 1900–1909, 1918–1928 |
Thomas McCallum | Southern | Liberal | 1927 | 1920–1938 |
Robert Thomson Melrose | Southern | Liberal | 1927 | 1921–1927 |
William George Mills [1] | Northern | Country Party | 1927 | 1918–1933 |
William Morrow | Northern | Liberal | 1930 | 1915–1934 |
Thomas Pascoe | Midland | Liberal | 1927 | 1900–1933 |
George Henry Prosser | Central No. 2 | Liberal | 1927 | 1921–1933 |
George Ritchie | Northern | Liberal | 1930 | 1924–1944 |
Sir Lancelot Stirling | Southern | Liberal | 1930 | 1891–1932 |
Henry Tassie | Central No. 2 | Liberal | 1930 | 1918–1938 |
- 1 The two MLCs for Northern District in the previous parliament whose terms were not due to expire until 1927, Sir John George Bice and John Lewis, both of the Liberal Federation, had both died in the second half of 1923. Their seats were filled simultaneously with the 1924 elections for the other class of seats, with four members instead of the usual two being elected, and the third and fourth-placed candidates, William George Mills and Percy Blesing, being elected for a half-term.[1]
References
- ^ "A LABOUR GOVERNMENT EXPECTED". The Register. Adelaide: National Library of Australia. 9 April 1924. p. 9. Retrieved 22 January 2015.