Electoral district of Nundah explained

Nundah
State:qld
Created:1888
Abolished:1992
Namesake:Nundah, Queensland

Nundah was an electoral district of the Legislative Assembly in the Australian state of Queensland from 1888 to 1992.[1]

The district was based in the northern suburbs of Brisbane. At the time of its abolition it included the suburbs of Nundah, Eagle Farm, Hendra and Toombul.

History

In the 1904 Queensland state election, the sitting Ministerialist Thomas Bridges faced a formidable opponent in the person of Sir Arthur Rutledge. Rutledge had been a Wesleyan minister in New England and solicitor in Brisbane, before entering the Queensland parliament, where he rose to the office of Attorney-General and accepted a knighthood in 1903. As part of his strategy to become Premier, Rutledge decided to not to recontest his seat of Maranoa but rather contest an electorate closer to Brisbane, and chose the semi-rural seat of Nundah which, he assumed, would be easily won by a man of his political experience, especially as it was already held by a fellow Ministerialist. Many large business houses backed Rutledge, as did the editor of the Brisbane Courier (Rutledge's son-in-law Charles Brunsdon Fletcher was the editor of the Brisbane Courier until 1903).[2] His public meetings were packed with prominent religious and political leaders, in contrast to a low-key campaign run by Bridges based on his community service and commitment to keep the cost of railway tickets low. Contrary to every prediction, Bridges won the election by 253 votes. This humiliating loss ended Rutledge's political career, and he accepted an appointment as district judge.[3]

Members for Nundah

MemberPartyTerm
 George AgnewConservative1888–1890
 Ministerial1890–1896
 Thomas BridgesMinisterial1896–1903
 Liberal1903–1907
 Kidstonites1907
 Richard SumnerKidstonites1907–1909
 Independent Opposition1909
 Thomas BridgesLiberal1909–1916
 National1916–1918
 Hubert SizerNational1918–1923
 William KelsoUnited Party1923–1925
 Country and Progressive National1925–1932
 John HayesLabor1932–1947
 Frank RobertsLabor1947–1953
 Independent1953–1956
 Jim HadleyLabor1956–1957
 Queensland Labor1957–1957
 William KnoxLiberal1957–1989
 Phil HeathLabor1989–1991
 Terry SullivanLabor1991–1992

Election results

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

See also

Notes and References

  1. 28 April 2020.
  2. Web site: Courier Mail Brisbane Newspaper History. Brisbane History. 23 April 2015. 4 February 2015. https://web.archive.org/web/20150204162547/http://brisbanehistory.com/Brisbane_Courier.html. dead.
  3. News: OFFICIAL DECLARATION AT NUNDAH. . . 31 August 1904 . 23 April 2015 . 5 . National Library of Australia.