Electoral district of Barcoo explained

Barcoo
State:qld
Created:1885
Abolished:1972
Namesake:Barcoo River
Class:Rural
Coordinates:-28.4833°N 183°W

Barcoo was an electoral district of the Legislative Assembly in the Australian state of Queensland from 1885 to 1972.[1]

It was created in 1885, by dividing the district of Mitchell, with Barcoo taking up its western area. It was named after the Barcoo River, and covered remote rural areas in Southwest Queensland.[1]

Barcoo was mostly a safe seat for the Labor Party

The death of Frank Murphy created a by-election on 5 March 1892. A shearer, Tommy Ryan (not to be confused with Premier T. J. Ryan), became the first endorsed Labor candidate in Queensland, and won the seat against opponent William Henry Campbell, the editor and proprietor of the local newspaper, The Western Champion.[2]

The seat was later held by the Premier, T. J. Ryan. Remarkably, his win in 1909 was the last time a member was elected for the seat at a general election. All subsequent members were the victors in by-elections.

The electorate was abolished in the redistribution preceding the 1972 state election.

Members for Barcoo

MemberPartyTerm
 Frank Reid Murphy1885–1892
 Tommy RyanLabour1892–1893
 George KerrMinisterialist1893–1909
 T. J. RyanLabor1909–1919
 Frank BulcockLabor1919–1942
 Ned DavisLabor1943–1961
 Eugene O'DonnellLabor1961–1972

Election results

See main article: Electoral results for the district of Barcoo.

See also

Notes and References

  1. 27 April 2020.
  2. News: FIRST LABOUR MEMBER. . . Brisbane . 9 November 1936 . 27 December 2013 . 21 . National Library of Australia.