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This is a list of members
of the 13th Legislative
Assembly of Queensland from
1899 to 1902, as elected at the 1899
election held between 1
March 1899 and 25 March 1899 (due to problems of
distance and communications, it was not possible
to hold the elections on a single day).[1]
| Peter Airey[16] |
Labour |
Flinders |
1901–1907; 1908–1909 |
| John Annear |
Ministerial |
Maryborough |
1884–1902 |
| William Drayton Armstrong |
Ministerial |
Lockyer |
1893–1904; 1907–1918 |
| George
Barber[13] |
Labour |
Bundaberg |
1901–1935 |
| Walter Barnes[7] |
Ministerial |
Bulimba |
1901–1915; 1918–1933 |
| John Bartholomew |
Ministerial |
Maryborough |
1896–1902 |
| Joshua Thomas Bell |
Ministerial |
Dalby |
1893–1911 |
| Jason Boles |
Opposition |
Port Curtis |
1893–1904 |
| David
Bowman[3] |
Labour |
Warrego |
1899–1902; 1904–1916 |
| Thomas Bridges |
Ministerial |
Nundah |
1896–1907; 1909–1918 |
| William Browne |
Labour |
Croydon |
1893–1904 |
| John Burrows[14] |
Labour |
Charters Towers |
1901–1907 |
| Albert Callan |
Ministerial |
Fitzroy |
1889–1902 |
| John Cameron[17] |
Ministerial |
Brisbane North |
1893–1896; 1901–1908 |
| John Dunmore Campbell[1] |
Ministerial |
Moreton |
1899–1909 |
| James Chataway[9] |
Ministerial |
Mackay |
1893–1901 |
| Alfred Cowley |
Ministerial |
Herbert |
1888–1907 |
| James
Cribb |
Ministerial |
Bundamba |
1893–1896; 1899–1915 |
| Thomas Bridson Cribb |
Ministerial |
Ipswich |
1896–1904 |
| George Curtis |
Independent |
Rockhampton |
1893–1902 |
| David Dalrymple |
Ministerial |
Mackay |
1888–1904 |
| Anderson Dawson[14] |
Labour |
Charters Towers |
1893–1901 |
| Thomas Dibley |
Labour |
Woolloongabba |
1896–1907 |
| Hon James
Dickson[7] |
Ministerial |
Bulimba |
1873–1888; 1892–1901 |
| James Drake[4] |
Opposition |
Enoggera |
1888–1899 |
| John Dunsford |
Labour |
Charters Towers |
1893–1905 |
| Thomas Finney[6] |
Ministerial |
Toowong |
1896–1900 |
| Andrew Fisher[10] |
Labour |
Gympie |
1893–1896; 1899–1901 |
| Charles Fitzgerald |
Labour |
Mitchell |
1896–1902 |
| John Fogarty |
Opposition |
Drayton and Toowoomba |
1893–1904 |
| Edward Barrow Forrest[1] |
Ministerial |
Brisbane North |
1899–1912 |
| James
Forsythe |
Ministerial |
Carpentaria |
1899–1907; 1909–1918 |
| George Fox[8] |
Ministerial |
Normanby |
1877–1878; 1901–1914 |
| Justin Foxton |
Ministerial |
Carnarvon |
1883–1904 |
| Thomas Givens |
Labour |
Cairns |
1899–1902 |
| Thomas Glassey[5][13] |
Labour |
Bundaberg |
1888–1893; 1894–1901 |
| Samuel Grimes |
Ministerial |
Oxley |
1878–1902 |
| William Henry Groom[11] |
Opposition |
Drayton and Toowoomba |
1862–1901 |
| John Hamilton |
Ministerial |
Cook |
1878–1904 |
| William Hamilton |
Labour |
Gregory |
1899–1915 |
| Patrick Hanran |
Ministerial |
Townsville |
1899–1909 |
| Herbert Hardacre |
Labour |
Leichhardt |
1893–1919 |
| William Higgs[15] |
Labour |
Fortitude Valley |
1899–1901 |
| William Hood[3] |
Ministerial |
Warrego |
1898–1899 |
| George Jackson |
Labour |
Kennedy |
1893–1909 |
| Charles Moffatt Jenkinson |
Opposition |
Wide Bay |
1898–1902; 1903–1909 |
| Francis
Kates |
Ind./Min. |
Cunningham |
1878–1881; 1883–1888;
1899–1903 |
| William Kent |
Ministerial |
Burnett |
1899–1904 |
| Denis Keogh |
Labour |
Rosewood |
1896–1902; 1904–1911 |
| George Kerr |
Labour |
Barcoo |
1893–1909 |
| William Kidston |
Labour |
Rockhampton |
1896–1911 |
| John Leahy |
Independent |
Bulloo |
1893–1909 |
| Vincent
Lesina |
Labour |
Clermont |
1899–1912 |
| John Linnett[12] |
Independent |
North
Rockhampton |
1901–1902 |
| Frederick Lord |
Ministerial |
Stanley |
1893–1902 |
| Abraham Luya[2] |
Ministerial |
South Brisbane |
1888–1893; 1899 |
| Edward Macartney[6] |
Ministerial |
Toowong |
1900–1908; 1909–1920 |
| Charles McDonald[16] |
Labour |
Flinders |
1893–1901 |
| Thomas Macdonald-Paterson[17] |
Ministerial |
Brisbane North |
1878–1885; 1896–1901 |
| Frank McDonnell |
Labour |
Fortitude Valley |
1896–1907 |
| Donald
MacKintosh |
Ministerial |
Cambooya |
1899–1915 |
| John McMaster[15] |
Ministerial |
Fortitude Valley |
1885–1899; 1901–1904;
1907–1908 |
| William Maxwell |
Labour |
Burke |
1899–1909 |
| William Moore |
Ministerial |
Murilla |
1898–1904; 1907–1909 |
| Arthur Morgan |
Ministerial |
Warwick |
1887–1896; 1898–1906 |
| Daniel Mulcahy[10] |
Labour |
Gympie |
1901–1912 |
| John Murray[8] |
Ministerial |
Normanby |
1888–1901 |
| John Newell |
Ministerial |
Woothakata |
1896–1902 |
| William O'Connell |
Ministerial |
Musgrave |
1888–1903 |
| Walter Paget[9] |
Ministerial |
Mackay |
1901–1915 |
| Andrew Lang Petrie |
Ministerial |
Toombul |
1893–1926 |
| Robert Philp |
Ministerial |
Townsville |
1886–1915 |
| Thomas Plunkett |
Opposition |
Albert |
1888–1896; 1899–1908 |
| Matthew Reid[4] |
Labour |
Enoggera |
1893–1896; 1899–1902 |
| Arthur Rutledge |
Ministerial |
Maranoa |
1878–1893; 1899–1904 |
| George Ryland |
Labour |
Gympie |
1899–1912 |
| Robert Harrison Smith |
Ministerial |
Bowen |
1888–1902 |
| William Stephens |
Ministerial |
South Brisbane |
1888–1904; 1907–1908 |
| Alfred John Stephenson |
Ministerial |
Ipswich |
1896–1902 |
| James Stewart[12] |
Labour |
North
Rockhampton |
1896–1901 |
| James Stodart |
Ministerial |
Logan |
1896–1918 |
| George Story |
Ministerial |
Balonne |
1896–1904 |
| George Thorn |
Ministerial |
Fassifern |
1867–1874; 1876–1878;
1879–1883; 1887–1888;
1893–1902 |
| William
Thorn |
Opposition |
Aubigny |
1894–1904; 1908–1912 |
| James Tolmie[11] |
Ind. Min. |
Drayton and Toowoomba |
1901–1907; 1909–1918 |
| Nicholas Tooth |
Ministerial |
Burrum |
1893–1902 |
| Henry
Turley[2] |
Labour |
South Brisbane |
1893–1899; 1899–1902 |
| Henry Turner[12] |
Labour |
North
Rockhampton |
1901, 1902–1907 |
1 Edward
Barrow Forrest and John
Dunmore Campbell, the newly elected
Ministerial members for Brisbane
North and Moreton,
were members of the Marine Board and were claimed
to have held an office of profit under the Crown.
They therefore resigned their seats to contest
them at a by-election, and were returned unopposed
on 20 April 1899. (Melbourne Argus, 14 April 1899,
p.6)
2 On
6 July 1899, one of the Ministerial members for South
Brisbane, Abraham
Luya, died. Labour candidate and former
member Henry
Turley won the
resulting by-election on 22 July 1899.
3 At
the 1899 election, William
Hood had been returned
by a one-vote majority in Warrego.
His sole opponent, Labour candidate David Bowman, filed a petition
against his return and on 21 November 1899, the
election was declared void. Bowman won the
resulting by-election on 16 December 1899 with a
majority of 44 votes.
4 On
7 December 1899, James
Drake, the Opposition member for Enoggera,
was appointed to the Queensland
Legislative Council. Labour candidate Matthew
Reidwon the resulting by-election on 23
December 1899.
5 Thomas
Glassey, elected as the Labour member for Bundaberg,
resigned from the party and his seat in 1900. He
won the resulting by-election against a Labour
opponent on 14 July 1900.
6 On
5 October 1900, Thomas
Finney, the Ministerial member for Toowong,
resigned. Ministerial candidate Edward
Macartney won the
resulting by-election on 24 November 1900.
7 On
10 January 1901, James
Dickson, the Ministerial member for Bulimba,
died. Ministerial candidate Walter
Barnes won the
resulting by-election on 16 February 1901.
8 On
1 March 1901, John
Murray, the Ministerial member of Normanby,
resigned. Ministerial candidate George
Fox won the resulting
by-election on 13 April 1901.
9 On
12 April 1901, James
Chataway, the Ministerial member for Mackay,
died. Ministerial candidate Walter
Paget won the resulting
by-election on 25 May 1901.
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