Electoral district of Ovens

Ovens
VictoriaLegislative Assembly
Location in Victoria, 1856
StateVictoria
Created1856
Abolished1927
NamesakeThe Ovens
DemographicRural

Ovens (or The Ovens) was an electoral district of the Legislative Assembly[1][2] in the Australian state of Victoria from 1856 to 1927. It was based in northern Victoria, bordered by the Ovens River in the south-west and included the town of Beechworth, Victoria.[3]

The district of Ovens was one of the initial districts of the first Victorian Legislative Assembly, 1856.[1] It was defined in the Victorian Constitution Act 1855 (taking effect at the 1856 elections) as:

Commencing at the Junction of Whorouly Creek with the River Ovens, bounded on the West by a Line bearing North Twenty Miles, thence on the North by a Line bearing East to the Little River, on the East by the Little River to its Source in the dividing Range, thence by the dividing Range and a Line South to a Point on the Ovens River Nine Miles above its Junction with the River Buckland ; on the South by a Line from the last-mentioned Point to the Source of the River Buckland, thence by the dividing Range to the Source of the River Buffalo, and again on the South and West by that River and the Ovens to the commencing Point.[4]

Ovens was superseded by Electoral district of Wangaratta and Ovens in 1927.[2]

  1. ^ a b Sweetman, Edward (1920). Constitutional Development of Victoria, 1851-6. Whitcombe & Tombs Limited. p. 183. Retrieved 5 May 2013.
  2. ^ a b "Former Members". re-member: a database of all Victorian MPs since 1851. Parliament of Victoria. Retrieved 26 August 2022.
  3. ^ "Electoral district of Ovens" (map). 1855. Retrieved 14 April 2013.
  4. ^ "Victoria Constitution Act 1855" (PDF). Retrieved 5 May 2013.