Electoral district of St Kilda
Former electoral district of Victoria, Australia
Australian electorate
37°52′S 144°59′E / 37.867°S 144.983°E / -37.867; 144.983 The Electoral district of St Kilda was one of the inaugural electoral districts of the Victorian Legislative Assembly, abolished on 2 October 1992.
St Kilda was one of the initial districts created in the first Victorian Legislative Assembly, 1856.[1] It included an area south of the Yarra River and the then villages of St Kilda and Elsternwick.[2]
Members for St Kilda
Two members initially, one after the redistribution of 1889.
Member 1 | Party | Term | Member 2 | Party | Term | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Thomas Fellows | Unaligned | 1856–1858 | Frederick James Sargood | Unaligned | 1856–1857 | ||
John Crews | Unaligned | 1858–1859 | Henry Chapman | Unaligned | 1858–1859 | ||
Sir Archibald Michie | Unaligned | 1859–1861 | James Johnston | Unaligned | 1859–1864 | ||
Kenric Brodribb | Unaligned | 1861–1864 | |||||
Sir Archibald Michie | Unaligned | 1864–1865 | John Crews | Unliagned | 1864–1865 | ||
Joshua Snowball | Unaligned | 1866–1867 | Brice Bunny | Unaligned | 1866–1867 | ||
Thomas Fellows | Unaligned | 1868–1872 | Cole Aspinall | Unaligned | 1868–1870 | ||
Murray Smith | Unaligned | 1873–1877 | James Stephen | Unaligned | 1870–1874 | ||
Godfrey Carter | Unaligned | 1877–1883 | Edward Dixon | Unaligned | 1874–1880 | ||
Sir Matthew Davies | Unaligned | 1883–1889 | Joseph Harris | Unaligned | 1880–1889 | ||
Sir George Turner | Unaligned | 1889–1901 | |||||
William Williams | Liberal | 1901–1902 | |||||
Robert McCutcheon | Ministerialist/ Independent Liberal | 1902–1917 | |||||
Agar Wynne | Unaligned | 1917–1920 | |||||
Frederic Eggleston | Nationalist | 1920–1927 | |||||
Burnett Gray | Liberal | 1927–1932 | |||||
Sir Archie Michaelis | United Australia Party/ Liberal Party | 1932–1952 | |||||
John Bourke | Labor Party | 1952–1955 | |||||
Baron Snider | Liberal Party | 1955–1964 | |||||
Brian Dixon | Liberal Party | 1964–1982 | |||||
Andrew McCutcheon | Labor Party | 1982–1992 |
Election results
See also
- Parliaments of the Australian states and territories
- List of members of the Victorian Legislative Assembly
References
- "Re-Member (former members)". Parliament of Victoria. Retrieved 7 February 2014.
- ^ Edward Sweetman (1920). Constitutional Development of Victoria, 1851-6. Whitcombe & Tombs Limited. p. 183. Retrieved 26 May 2013.
- ^ "Central Province and Electoral Districts of Melbourne, St Kilda, Collingwood, South Melbourne, Richmond and Williamstown" (map). State Library of Victoria. 27 November 1855. Retrieved 26 May 2013.
- v
- t
- e
- Abbotsford
- Alberton
- Allandale
- Altona
- Anglesey
- Ararat
- Ascot Vale
- Avoca
- Ballarat
- Ballarat East
- Ballarat North
- Ballarat South
- Ballarat West
- Balwyn
- Barwon
- Belfast
- Benalla
- Benalla and Yarrawonga
- Bendigo
- Bennettswood
- Bogong
- Boroondara
- Borung
- Brunswick East
- Brunswick West
- Bulla
- Bulla and Dalhousie
- Buninyong
- Burwood
- Camberwell
- Carlton
- Carlton South
- Castlemaine
- Castlemaine and Kyneton
- Castlemaine and Maldon
- Castlemaine Boroughs
- Caulfield East
- Clayton
- Clifton Hill
- Clunes and Allandale
- Coburg
- Colac
- Collingwood
- Creswick
- Crowlands
- Dalhousie
- Dandenong and Berwick
- Dandenong North
- Daylesford
- Deer Park
- Delatite
- Derrimut
- Donald and Swan Hill
- Doncaster
- Doveton
- Dromana
- Dundas
- Dundas and Follett
- Dunolly
- Eaglehawk
- East Bourke
- East Bourke Boroughs
- East Melbourne
- Eastern Suburbs
- Elsternwick
- Emerald Hill
- Essendon and Flemington
- Evelyn and Mornington
- Ferntree Gully
- Fitzroy
- Flemington
- Forest Hill
- Frankston East
- Frankston North
- Frankston South
- Geelong East
- Geelong North
- Geelong West
- Gembrook
- Gippsland
- Gippsland Central
- Gippsland North
- Gippsland West
- Gisborne
- Glen Iris
- Glenelg
- Glenhuntly
- Glenroy
- Goulburn
- Goulburn Valley
- Grant
- Greensborough
- Grenville
- Gunbower
- Hampden
- Heatherton
- Heidelberg
- Horsham
- Jika Jika
- Jolimont and West Richmond
- Kara Kara
- Kara Kara and Borung
- Keilor
- Keysborough
- Kilmore
- Kilmore and Anglesey
- Kilmore, Dalhousie and Lancefield
- Kilsyth
- Knox
- Korong
- Korong and Eaglehawk
- Kyneton
- Kyneton Boroughs
- Loddon
- Lyndhurst
- Maldon
- Mandurang
- Maryborough
- Maryborough and Daylesford
- Maryborough and Talbot
- Melbourne South
- Mentone
- Mernda
- Midlands
- Mitcham
- Moira
- Moonee Ponds
- Moorabbin
- Mooroolbark
- Mount Waverley
- The Murray
- Murray Boroughs
- Murray Valley
- Noble Park
- Normanby
- North Grant
- North Grenville
- North Melbourne
- Numurkah and Nathalia
- Nunawading
- Ormond
- Ouyen
- Ovens
- Polwarth and South Grenville
- Polwarth, Ripon, Hampden and South Grenville
- Port Fairy
- Port Fairy and Glenelg
- Port Melbourne
- Portland
- Public Officers
- Railway Officers
- Rainbow
- Reservoir
- Ripon and Hampden
- Ripponlea
- Rodney
- Sandhurst
- Sandhurst South
- Sandridge
- Scoresby
- Seymour
- Shepparton and Euroa
- South Bourke
- South Grant
- South Melbourne
- South Yarra
- Springvale
- St Kilda
- Stawell
- Stawell and Ararat
- Sunshine
- Swan Hill
- Syndal
- Talbot
- Talbot and Avoca
- Toorak
- Tullamarine
- Upper Goulburn
- Upper Yarra
- Villiers and Heytesbury
- Walhalla
- Wangaratta
- Wangaratta and Ovens
- Wangaratta and Rutherglen
- Wantirna
- Waranga
- Warrenheip
- Warrenheip and Grenville
- Warrnambool
- West Bourke
- West Melbourne
- Westernport
- Whittlesea
- Wimmera
- Windermere
- Wonthaggi
- Yarraville
- Yuroke
This Victoria (Australia) government-related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e