Martin ministry (1870–1872)

Third New South Wales government ministry led by James Martin From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The third Martin ministry was the thirteenth ministry of the Colony of New South Wales, and the third and final occasion of being led by Sir James Martin.

Quick Facts Third Martin ministry, Date formed ...
Third Martin ministry

13th Cabinet of the Colony of New South Wales
Thumb
Premier Sir James Martin and the Colony of New South Wales (1863–1900)
Date formed16 December 1870 (1870-12-16)
Date dissolved13 May 1872 (1872-5-13)
People and organisations
MonarchQueen Victoria
GovernorThe Earl Belmore
Head of governmentSir James Martin
No. of ministers7
Member partyunaligned
Status in legislatureMinority government
Opposition partyunaligned
Opposition leader
History
PredecessorFifth Cowper ministry
SuccessorFirst Parkes ministry
Close

Martin was elected in the first free elections for the New South Wales Legislative Assembly held in 1856. He came to power as Premier on the first occasion after Charles Cowper's government fell in October 1863.[1] Martin was asked to form government on the second occasion, this time in coalition with his former rival, Henry Parkes, after Cowper again lost the confidence of the Assembly in December 1865.[1] Martin came to power on this occasion, after Cowper again lost confidence of the Assembly.

The title of Premier was widely used to refer to the Leader of Government, but not enshrined in formal use until 1920.

There was no party system in New South Wales politics until 1887. Under the constitution, ministers were required to resign to recontest their seats in a by-election when appointed. A poll was required for West Sydney with Sir John Robertson and William Windeyer comfortably re-elected. The other ministers were all re-elected unopposed.[2]

This ministry covers the period from 16 December 1870 until 13 May 1872, when Martin retired.[3] Upon retirement from politics, he was appointed as Chief Justice of New South Wales.[1]

Composition of ministry

Ministers are members of the Legislative Assembly unless otherwise noted.

See also

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.