Lyne ministry

The Lyne ministry was the 29th ministry of the Colony of New South Wales, and was led by the 13th Premier, the Honourable Sir William Lyne, KCMG, MLA.

Lyne ministry
29th Cabinet of the Colony of New South Wales
Premier Sir William Lyne and the Colony of New South Wales (1863–1900)
Date formed14 September 1899 (1899-09-14)
Date dissolved27 March 1901 (1901-03-27)
People and organisations
Head of stateQueen Victoria (represented by The Earl Beauchamp)
Head of governmentSir William Lyne
No. of ministers10
Member partyProtectionist Party
Status in legislatureMajority government
Opposition partyLiberal and Reform Association
Opposition leaderJoseph Carruthers
History
PredecessorReid ministry
SuccessorSee ministry

Lyne was elected to the New South Wales Legislative Assembly in 1880 as member for Hume, serving in the Jennings and Dibbs ministries. prior to assuming leadership of the Protectionist Party. The ministry covers the period from 14 September 1899 until 27 March 1901,[1][2] when Lyne was elected to the first federal Parliament.[3][4] Lyne was succeeded by his Protectionist Party colleague, John See.

Composition of ministry

The composition of the ministry was announced by Premier Lyne on 14 September 1899 and covers the period up to 27 March 1901; although some ministers retained portfolio responsibilities until the See ministry was sworn in. Ministers are listed in order of seniority.

Portfolio Minister Party Term start Term end Term length
Premier Hon. Sir William Lyne, KCMG, MLA1   Protectionist 14 September 1899 27 March 1901 1 year, 194 days
Vice-President of the Executive Council   Protectionist 15 September 1899 1 day
Colonial Treasurer
Collector of Internal Revenue
  Protectionist 15 September 1899 20 March 1901 1 year, 186 days
Colonial Secretary
Registrar of Records
Hon. John See MLA   Protectionist 14 September 1899 27 March 1901 1 year, 194 days
Attorney-General Hon. Bernhard Wise KC, MLC   Protectionist
Secretary for Lands Hon. Thomas Hassall MLA   Protectionist 9 April 1901 1 year, 207 days
Secretary for Public Works Hon. Edward O'Sullivan MLA   Protectionist 27 March 1901 1 year, 194 days
Minister of Justice Hon. William Herbert Wood, MLA   Protectionist 9 April 1901 1 year, 207 days
Minister of Public Instruction
Minister for Labour and Industry
Hon. John Perry, MLA   Protectionist 27 March 1901 1 year, 194 days
Secretary for Mines and Agriculture Hon. John Fegan MLA   Protectionist 15 September 1899 8 April 1901 1 year, 205 days
Postmaster-General Hon. William Crick MLA   Protectionist 14 September 1899 28 February 1901 1 year, 167 days
Vice-President of the Executive Council
Representative of the Government in Legislative Council
Hon. James Alexander Kenneth Mackay, MLC   Protectionist 15 September 1899 24 April 1900 221 days
Hon. Francis Suttor MLC   Protectionist 12 June 1900 27 March 1901 288 days
1 In 1900, Lyne was appointed a Knight Commander of the Order of St Michael and St George whilst in office.
gollark: They're not replicating the actual implementation very much. They do seem to be replicating the rough functionality.
gollark: They also do not actually perfectly remember things (or "form new memories" at all after training) unless you glue some kind of external memory retrieval on.
gollark: They might have something like emotions internally (it would be hard to check) but there's not a strong reason for them to be humanlike given their very different tasks.
gollark: Not as capable, obviously, but the same sort of thing.
gollark: Neural networks basically *are* just something like human intuition running on computers anyway.

See also

References

  1. "Former Members - Chronological List of Ministries 1856 to 2009 (requires download)". Project for the Sesquicentenary of Responsible Government in NSW. Parliament of New South Wales. Archived from the original (Excel spreadsheet) on 15 March 2011. Retrieved 17 July 2011.
  2. "Part 6 : Ministries" (PDF). New South Wales Parliamentary Record. Parliament of New South Wales. Retrieved 12 April 2020.
  3. Serle, Percival. "Lyne, Sir William John (1844–1913)". Dictionary of Australian Biography. Project Gutenberg Australia. Retrieved 14 August 2011.
  4. Cunneen, Chris (1986). "Lyne, Sir William John (1844–1913)". Australian Dictionary of Biography. Melbourne University Press. ISSN 1833-7538. Retrieved 14 August 2011 via National Centre of Biography, Australian National University.
Preceded by
Reid ministry
Lyne ministry
1899–1901
Succeeded by
See ministry
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