Members of the Victorian Legislative Council, 1876–1878

This is a list of members of the Victorian Legislative Council from the elections of 15 August – 15 November 1876 to the elections of 17 August to 16 September 1878.[1][2]

There were six Electoral Provinces and five members elected to each Province.[3]

VLC Electoral Provinces, 1856–1882
Note the "Term in Office" refers to that members term(s) in the Council, not necessarily for that Province.
NameProvinceTerm in Office
Thomas à BeckettCentral1852–1856; 1858–1878
Robert AndersonEastern1866–1883
James BalfourSouth1874–1913
John Pinney BearSouth1863–1878
George BelcherSouth-Western1875–1886
Niel BlackWestern1859–1880
Thomas Bromell [d]Western1874–1887
James BuchananSouth1876–1898
William CampbellNorth-Western1851–1854; 1862–1882
George Ward ColeCentral1853–1855; 1859–1879
John CummingSouth-Western1870–1880
Henry CuthbertSouth-Western1874–1907
Frank DobsonSouth1870–1895
Nicholas FitzgeraldNorth-Western1864–1908
Alexander FraserNorth-Western1858–1881
James GrahamCentral1853–1854; 1866–1886
Thomas HamiltonSouth1872–1884
James HentySouth-Western1853–1882
William HighettEastern1853–1856; 1857–1880
Caleb JennerSouth-Western1863–1886
William MitchellNorth-Western1853; 1856–1858; 1859–1884
Francis Murphy [a]Eastern1851–1853; 1853–1856; 1872–1876
Francis RobertsonNorth-Western1860–1864; 1868–1886
Frederick Thomas SargoodCentral1874–1880; 1882–1901
Robert SimsonWestern1868–1878; 1880–1882
Charles SladenWestern1855–1856; 1864–1868; 1876–1882
Theodotus SumnerCentral1873–1883
John WallaceEastern1873–1901
Samuel WilsonWestern1875–1881
William WilsonEastern1875–1880

William Mitchell was President of the Council, Caleb Jenner was Chairman of Committees.[2]

[a] Murphy resigned November 1876, replaced by Robert Dyce Reid the same month.

References

  1. "Legislative Council Elections since 1856". Parliament of Victoria. Retrieved 24 March 2014.
  2. 1 2 Victorian Hansard, Session 1876 (PDF). XXIV. John Ferres, Melb. 1877.
  3. Sweetman, Edward (1920). Constitutional Development of Victoria, 1851-6. Whitcombe & Tombs Limited. p. 183. Retrieved 24 March 2014.
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