Electoral district of Eyre (South Australia) explained

Eyre
State:sa
Created:1938
Abolished:1997
Namesake:Edward John Eyre
Class:Rural
Coordinates:-29°N 137°W
Footnotes:coordinates[1]

Eyre was an electoral district of the House of Assembly in the Australian state of South Australia from 1938 to 1997.[2]

The seat was located in the vast outback of northern South Australia. It was held by the Liberal Party and its predecessor, the Liberal and Country League, for its entire existence, and was usually a safely conservative seat. For the last 27 years of its existence, it was held by Graham Gunn, who was originally elected in 1970 as a member of the LCL and served as Speaker of the South Australian House of Assembly in the Dean Brown government.

Eyre was pushed to the south ahead of the 1993 election, taking in much of the abolished seat of Stuart. Eyre was abolished in a boundary redistribution prior to the 1997 election, dividing the northern South Australian outback into two seats. The eastern half was transferred to the recreated seat of Stuart, while the western half became part of the massively expanded seat of Giles. Gunn successfully transferred to Stuart.

Members

MemberPartyTerm
  1938–1956
  1956–1968
  1968–1970
  1970–1974
 Liberal1974–1997

Election results

See main article: Electoral results for the district of Eyre (South Australia).

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Gerard. Gerard. Background Paper South Australian Elections 1989. 24 August 1990. Parliament of Australia, Parliamentary Research Service. Canberra, ACT. 18. 13 November 2015.
  2. Web site: Statistical Record of the Legislature, 1836 - 2007. Parliament of South Australia. 19 January 2014. https://web.archive.org/web/20190311113513/http://www.parliament.sa.gov.au/AboutParliament/From1836/Documents/StatisticalRecordoftheLegislature1836to20093.pdf. 11 March 2019. dead.