Six hungry families
Six hungry families was a phrase used in the 1880s and 1890s to describe six of the most prominent and powerful families in colonial Western Australia, with extensive influence in judicial, political, mercantile and social circles. It was first used by John Horgan during his unsuccessful 1886 campaign for election to the Western Australian Legislative Council.
Horgan used the phrase to imply that the families were hungry for more wealth, power, influence and land, and that this was at the expense of the working class. He was later successfully sued for libel by George Walpole Leake, a member of one of the "six hungry families", and fined £500, equivalent to in.
Roughly speaking, the "six hungry families" were:
- Leake
- Stone
- Lee Steere
- Shenton
- Lefroy
- Burt
Prominent members of the "six hungry families" included:
- Leake family:
- * George Walpole Leake
- * George Leake
- * Luke Leake
- Stone family:
- * Alfred Hawes Stone
- * Edward Albert Stone
- * Frank Mends Stone
- * George Frederick Stone
- * Patrick Stone
- Lee Steere family:
- * James George Lee Steere
- * Ernest Augustus Lee Steere
- Shenton family:
- *Arthur Shenton
- *Edward Shenton
- *Ernest Shenton
- *George Shenton Sr
- *George Shenton
- *William Kernott Shenton
- Lefroy family
- *Anthony O'Grady Lefroy
- *Edward Lefroy
- *Gerald de Courcy Lefroy
- *Henry Lefroy
- Burt family
- *Archibald Burt
- *Francis Burt
- *Septimus Burt
- *Octavius Burt