Electoral district of Canning

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Canning
Western AustraliaLegislative Assembly
State or territory: Western Australia
Created: 1897
Abolished: 1989
Namesake: Canning River
Demographic: South-East Metropolitan

The Electoral district of Canning was a electorate in the state of Western Australia. Eligible voters within the district elected a single representative, known as the member for Canning, to the Western Australian Legislative Assembly. The electorate, which was was named for the Canning River which ran through the electorate, was first contested at the 1897 elections[1] and was abolished in the 1988 redistribution.[2] It covered much of Perth's inner southern region, being reduced progressively as suburban areas such as Applecross, South Perth, Victoria Park and Belmont developed and became populous enough to require their own electorates. By the time of its dissolution it corresponded approximately with the present-day Kenwick district and had become a fairly safe Australian Labor Party seat.

[edit] Geography

Canning initially covered all the land south of the Swan River between North Lake Road, Alfred Cove and Epsom Avenue, Redcliffe, extending south and southeast to what are now South Street, Roe Highway and Brook Road. Most of this area was rural at the time, and at the 1897 election contained just 321 enrolled voters, but from the 1920s onwards and especially after World War II, suburban development along with electoral reform resulted in areas meeting the threshold to require an elected member. In the 1929 redistribution, Victoria Park was established and areas northeast of Orrong Road were moved into Middle Swan. Other areas were split in subsequent redistributions:

In its final incarnation, from 1983 until 1989, Canning included the suburbs of Beckenham, Ferndale, Kenwick, Langford, Lynwood, Thornlie and Wattle Grove, and parts of Cannington and East Cannington.[3]

[edit] Members for Canning

See also: Results for the Electoral district of Canning
Member Party Term
  Frank Wilson Oppositionist 18971901
  William Gordon Ministerial 19011911
  Charles Lewis Labor 19111914
  Robert Robinson Liberal 19141921
  Alec Clydesdale Labor 19211930
  Herbert Wells Nationalist 19301933
  Charles Cross Labor 19331947
  George Yates Liberal 19471950
  Arthur Griffith Liberal 19501953
  Colin Jamieson Labor 19531956
  William Gaffy Labor 19561959
  Des O'Neil Liberal 19591962
  Don May Labor 19621965
  Ross Elliott Liberal 19651968
  Tom Bateman Labor 19681986
  Judyth Watson Labor 19861989

[edit] References

  1. ^ Government of Western Australia (1896). "Constitution Act Amendment Act (60 Vict No 18)", Statutes of Western Australia, 1896.  Given royal assent on 8 October 1896.
  2. ^ "Electoral Districts Act 1947-1985 - Order in Council", Western Australia Government Gazette, 29 April 1988, p. 1988:1339-1527. 
  3. ^ "Electoral Districts Act 1947-1981 - Order in Council", Western Australia Government Gazette, 20 January 1982, p. 1982:113-173.