Queensland Voting Records

Queensland

 * Australia, Including Queensland, Electoral Rolls, 1903-1980 Index ($)
 * Queensland Electoral Rolls Index ($)
 * Queensland, Australia, Electoral Rolls 1959 Index ($)
 * Queensland, Australia, Electoral Rolls 1949 Index ($)add
 * Queensland, Australia, Electoral Rolls 1941 Index ($)
 * Queensland, Australia, Electoral Rolls 1934 Index ($)
 * Queensland, Australia, Electoral Rolls 1922 Index ($)
 * Queensland, Australia, Electoral Rolls 1913 Index ($)
 * Queensland, Australia, Electoral Rolls 1903 Index ($)
 * Queensland State Electoral Roll 1915 Index ($)
 * Queensland State Electoral Roll 1910 Index ($)
 * Queensland State Electoral Roll 1905 Index ($)
 * Queensland State Electoral Roll 1900 Index ($)

Australia

 * Australia, Electoral Rolls, 1903-1980, ($), index.
 * Australia Electoral Rolls, 1893-1949, ($), index

Information in the Electoral Rolls
There are two kinds of electoral roll for Queensland:


 * State electoral rolls, maintained by the Queensland Government
 * Commonwealth electoral rolls, maintained by the Federal Government

In recent years, the Queensland Government stopped maintaining its own electoral rolls and handed responsibility over to the Australian Electoral Commission, who manage the Commonwealth electoral rolls. So now there is only one set of electoral rolls in contemporary Queensland. The information available in the electoral roll is typically:


 * surname
 * given names
 * address
 * occupation
 * sex

Note that recently occupation and sex have been dropped from the electoral roll, so early rolls are more informative than later rolls.

Until recently (1990?) the electoral roll was organised by:


 * electorate
 * subdivision
 * surname
 * given names

This means that to find someone in the electoral roll, it helps a lot if you already know the electorate and sub-division. So if you have no clue where in Queensland the person was living, the process is a very tedious one of checking every electorate and every subdivision within the electorate. In this situation, it may be easier to use an index if one exists for that period.

More recently, the electoral rolls have been organised by:


 * state
 * surname
 * given names

which makes finding a person very easy by comparison. So later rolls are easier to use, but have less information.

Inspecting the Queensland Electoral Rolls
Places where you can view the historical electoral rolls for Queensland include:


 * Queensland Government State Archives on microfilm
 * National Archives of Australia on microfilm

Some genealogical societies hold partial collections of the historical electoral rolls:


 * Queensland family history societies

The current electoral roll can be viewed at:


 * some offices of the Australian Electoral Commission on microfiche
 * state libraries, including Queensland State Library, on microfiche

Indexes to the Queensland Electoral Roll
Queensland Family History Society have transcribed the Queensland electoral rolls for 1903, 1913, 1922 and 1934 (with more in progress) and sell them as CD-ROMs. These CDs can be searched on any combination of fields with support for wildcards (handy when there are spelling variations). This means you can search by name for the person you want. Then having found their address, you can search for other people living at that address in the hope of locating other relatives at that address.