RESPONSIBLE GOVERNMENT [PART I elected and one-third nominee members set up in that year exercised the power of creating two houses accorded them in 1850 by a local Act, and with the royal assent to that Act the principle of responsible government was formally introduced in 1855. In the case of Victoria, which was part of New South Wales until 1850, the Act of that year created a legislature of the same type as that subsisting in New South Wales, and that body likewise exercised the power of creating a Parliament with two chambers by a Bill which was confirmed by an Imperial Act, 18 & 19 Vict. c. 55. Queensland, also a part of New South Wales, received a constitution of the usual bicameral type in 1859, with responsible government forthwith. South Australia has a separate history: originating in 1834 as an experiment in free settlement, it was governed by a nominee Council from 1836 up to 1851, on which date it possessed under the authority given by the Imperial Act of 1850 a Council of twenty-four members, one-third only nominee, while in 1855-6, by a further exercise of the power given by the Act of 1850, the Legislature was reconstituted on the usual bicameral lines and responsible government came into force. In Western Australia a nominee Council existed in virtue of various Imperial Acts until 1868, when a representative element was introduced, and in 1870, in virtue of the Imperial Act of 1850, the Council became elective as to two-thirds of its numbers. In 1889 the Council passed an Act establish- ing an ordinary bicameral constitution, which was confirmed by an Imperial Act of 1890, and responsible government became a fait accompli. In the case of New Zealand there was little real organiza- tion of government until, by an Imperial Act of 18401 a Crown Colony form of Government was instituted. Natur- ally that did not in any way please the people there, and an Imperial Act of 1847 2 was intended to create an elaborate form of government with a central Legislature, which should be representative, and a number of provincial Councils also representative, but the members of the Councils were to be 1 3 & 4 Vict. c. 62. * See Henderson, Sir George Grey, pp. 121 seq.