1928 Brisbane City Council election
Appearance
(Redirected from Brisbane City Council election, 1928)
| |||
20 seats on the Brisbane City Council | |||
---|---|---|---|
| |||
|
The 1928 Brisbane City Council election was held on 18 February 1928 to elect the Lord Mayor and councillors for each of the 20 wards of the City of Brisbane.[1]
Results
[edit]The ruling United Party changed its name to Nationalist Civic Party during the preceding term.[2]
Ward[1] | Party | Councillor | |
---|---|---|---|
Brisbane | Labor | William Thomas King[3] | |
Bulimba | |||
Buranda | Labor | A. Laurie | |
Enoggera | |||
Fortitude Valley | Labor | J. P. Keogh | |
Ithaca | Nationalist Civic Party | Wm. Robert Warmington[3] | |
Kelvin Grove | Labor | J. Tait | |
Kurilpa | Nationalist Civic Party | Ernest Barstow[3] | |
Logan | Nationalist Civic Party | J. Soden | |
Maree | Nationalist Civic Party | Lewis Wills Luckins[3] | |
Merthyr | Nationalist Civic Party | A. M. Oxlade | |
Nundah | Independent | F. W. Bradbury | |
Oxley | Nationalist Civic Party | Frederick Arthur Stimpson[3] | |
Paddington | Labor | John Fihelly | |
Sandgate | Independent | William Frederick Schulz[3] | |
South Brisbane | Nationalist Civic Party | Robert William Henry Long[3] | |
Toombul | Nationalist Civic Party | C. W. Campbell | |
Toowong | Nationalist Civic Party | Archibald Watson | |
Windsor | Nationalist Civic Party | Thomas Prentice[3] | |
Wynnum | Nationalist Civic Party | William Logan Dart |
References
[edit]- ^ a b "Nationalists' Civic Regime Emphatically Approved. - LABOUR MAKES NO HEADWAY. BALANCE OF POWER MAINTAINED. MAYOR JOLLY'S HUGE MAJORITY. | SOLID VOTING IN CONTINUOUS RAIN. - The Brisbane Courier (Qld. : 1864 - 1933) - 20 Feb 1928". Brisbane Courier. 20 February 1928. Retrieved 26 March 2017.
- ^ Laverty, John. "William Alfred Jolly (1881–1955)". Australian Dictionary of Biography. National Centre of Biography, Australian National University. Retrieved 28 June 2018 – via Australian Dictionary of Biography.
- ^ a b c d e f g h "CITY COUNCIL ELECTIONS". Telegraph. Brisbane. 17 April 1931. p. 1. Retrieved 19 March 2024 – via National Library of Australia.