Former South Australian electoral district
Australian electorate
The Electoral district of Ridley was an electoral district of the South Australian House of Assembly , existing between 1938 and 1970 and between 1993 and 1997.
Named after John Ridley , the inventor of a successful threshing machine,[ 1] Ridley was a rural electorate located in the riverland area of South Australia , stretching along the southern bank of the Murray River from Morgan to the New South Wales border.[ 2] Ridley also contained the towns of Waikerie , Lyrup and Loxton .
Created for the 1938 South Australian election , following the change from multi-member to single-member electorates, Ridley was held by Tom Stott for its entire existence. Stott was the longest serving independent in Australian political history.[ 3]
Ridley was abolished at the 1970 election .[ 4]
Ridley was recreated as an electoral district in a 1991 redistribution for the 1993 election . In this incarnation, Ridley was 24,797 km² and contained the towns of Coonalpyn , Karoonda , Murray Bridge , Lameroo , Pinnaroo , Tailem Bend and Tintinara .[ 5] It was a safe Liberal seat, existing until 1997, when it was renamed Hammond .
Members
Election results
References
^ H. J. Finnis (1967) 'Ridley, John (1806 - 1887)', Australian Dictionary of Biography , Volume 2, Melbourne University Press.
^ Hetherington, R. & Reid, R. (1962) The South Australian Elections 1959 , Rigby.
^ Jennings, R. (1992) Barnacles and Parasites , Nesfield Press, Adelaide. ISBN 978-0-9599230-4-9 .
^ Jaensch, D. (1977) The Government of South Australia , University of Queensland Press, St Lucia, ISBN 0-7022-1352-7 .
^ South Australian State Electoral Office (1995), "Statistical Returns for General Elections, 11 December 1993", pp. 158, 194.