4th Kings
4th Kings was an electoral district in the Canadian province of Prince Edward Island, which elected two members to the Legislative Assembly of Prince Edward Island from 1873 to 1993.
Defunct provincial electoral district | |
---|---|
Legislature | Legislative Assembly of Prince Edward Island |
District created | 1873 |
First contested | 1873 |
Last contested | 1993 |
Demographics | |
Census divisions | Kings County |
The district comprised the southernmost portion of Kings County. It was abolished in 1996.
Members
Dual member
Assembly | Years | Member | Party | Member | Party | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
26th | 1873-1876 | Louis Henry Davies | Liberal | Manoah Rowe | Liberal | ||
27th | 1876-1879 | James Robertson | Liberal | Samuel Prowse | Conservative | ||
28th | 1879-1883 | William Poole | Conservative | ||||
29th | 1882 | Malcolm McFadyen | Liberal | James Robertson | Liberal | ||
1882-1886 | Samuel Prowse | Conservative | |||||
30th | 1886-1890 | Angus MacLeod | Liberal | ||||
31st | 1890-1893 | James Clow | Conservative |
Assemblyman-Councillor
Assembly | Years | Assemblyman | Party | Councillor | Party | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
32nd | 1893-1897 | Donald MacKinnon | Liberal | George Aitken | Liberal | ||
33rd | 1897-1899 | Murdock MacKinnon | Conservative | ||||
1899-1900 | Albert Prowse | Conservative | |||||
34th | 1900-1904 | John Mathieson | Conservative | ||||
35th | 1904-1908 | Albert Prowse | Conservative | ||||
36th | 1908-1912 | ||||||
37th | 1912-1915 | ||||||
38th | 1915-1919 | ||||||
39th | 1919-1923 | Wallace Butler | Liberal | William G. Sutherland | Liberal | ||
1922-1923 | Mark Bonnell | Liberal | |||||
40th | 1923-1926 | Maynard McDonald | Conservative | Albert Prowse | Conservative | ||
1926-1927 | Norman MacLeod | Independent | |||||
41st | 1927-1931 | John Campbell | Liberal | Wallace Butler | Liberal | ||
42nd | 1931-1935 | Montague Annear | Liberal | ||||
43rd | 1935-1939 | ||||||
44th | 1939-1943 | ||||||
45th | 1943-1947 | Murdock McGowan | Progressive Conservative | ||||
46th | 1947-1949 | Alexander Matheson | Liberal | ||||
1949-1951 | Daniel MacRae | Independent | |||||
47th | 1951-1955 | Lorne Bonnell | Liberal | ||||
48th | 1955-1959 | ||||||
49th | 1959-1962 | ||||||
50th | 1962-1966 | ||||||
51st | 1966-1970 | Keir Clark | Liberal | ||||
52nd | 1970-1971 | Gilbert Clements | Liberal | ||||
1971-1972 | vacant | ||||||
1972-1974 | John Bonnell | Liberal | |||||
53rd | 1974-1978 | Charles Fraser | Liberal | ||||
54th | 1978-1979 | Pat Binns | Progressive Conservative | Johnnie Williams | Progressive Conservative | ||
55th | 1979-1982 | Gilbert Clements | Liberal | ||||
56th | 1982-1984 | ||||||
1984-1986 | Stanley Bruce | Liberal | |||||
57th | 1986-1989 | ||||||
58th | 1989-1993 | ||||||
59th | 1993-1995 | ||||||
1995-1996 | Vacant |
gollark: The principle of doing something entirely pointless which has a negligible probability of doing anything, and not actually 50%?
gollark: You are entirely ignoring the really low probability of being elected.
gollark: Trying to become president is probably *not* a very effective strategy for that.
gollark: Of course, a virus with 1025 base pairs might come around.
gollark: It's not a huge obstacle if we just upscale humans to the size of galaxies or something.
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