Sunbury (1785–1973 electoral district)
Sunbury was an electoral district in New Brunswick. It was abolished in 1973 as New Brunswick moved from bloc voting to a single-member first past the post system. It was dissolved into the new ridings of Sunbury and Oromocto.
Defunct provincial electoral district | |
---|---|
Legislature | Legislative Assembly of New Brunswick |
District created | 1785 |
District abolished | 1973 |
First contested | 1785 |
Last contested | 1970 |
Members of the Legislative Assembly
Legislature | Years | Member | Party | Member | Party | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1st | 1786 – 1792 | William Hubbard | Independent | Richard Vandeburg | Independent | ||
2nd | 1793 – 1795 | John Agnew | Independent | James Glenie | Independent | ||
3rd | 1795 – 1802 | Samuel Denny Street | Independent | ||||
4th | 1802 – 1809 | Elijah Miles | Independent | ||||
5th | 1809 – 1816 | Samuel Denny Street | Independent | James Taylor | Independent | ||
6th | 1817 – 1819 | Elijah Miles | Independent | William Wilmot | Independent | ||
7th | 1820 | James Taylor | Independent | ||||
8th | 1821 – 1824 | Amos Perley[1] | Independent | ||||
1824 – 1827 | William Wilmot | Independent | |||||
9th | 1827 – 1830 | Thomas O. Miles | Independent | George Hayward | Independent | ||
10th | 1831 – 1834 | ||||||
11th | 1835 – 1837 | George Hayward, Jr. | Independent | ||||
12th | 1837 – 1842 | Henry T. Partelow | Independent | ||||
13th | 1843 – 1846 | William Scoullar | Independent | Whitehead S. Barker | Independent | ||
14th | 1847 – 1850 | George Hayward | Independent | Thomas O. Miles | Independent | ||
15th | 1851 – 1854 | William Scoullar | Independent | ||||
16th | 1854 – 1856 | Enoch Lunt | Independent | ||||
17th | 1856 – 1857 | William E. Perley | Liberal-Conservative | David Tapley | Independent | ||
18th | 1857 – 1861 | ||||||
19th | 1862 – 1865 | John Glasier | Liberal | ||||
20th | 1865 – 1866 | ||||||
21st | 1866 – 1870 | ||||||
22nd | 1870 – 1874 | Archibald Harrison | Liberal | John S. Covert[2] | Liberal | ||
23rd | 1875 – 1878 | William E. Perley | Liberal-Conservative | ||||
24th | 1879 – 1881 | ||||||
1881 – 1882 | James S. White | Independent | |||||
25th | 1883 | George A. Sterling[3] | Liberal | ||||
1883 – 1886 | Arthur Glasier | Liberal | |||||
26th | 1886 – 1890 | Charles B. Harrison | Liberal | ||||
27th | 1890 – 1892 | William E. Perley | Liberal-Conservative | ||||
28th | 1892 – 1895 | ||||||
29th | 1896 – 1899 | David Morrow | Independent | ||||
30th | 1899 – 1903 | Parker Glasier | Conservative | John Douglas Hazen[4] | Conservative | ||
31st | 1903 – 1908 | ||||||
32nd | 1908 – 1911 | ||||||
1911 – 1912 | George A. Perley | Independent | |||||
33rd | 1912 – 1917 | ||||||
34th | 1917 – 1920 | David W. Mersereau | Liberal | Robert H. Smith | Liberal | ||
35th | 1921 – 1925 | ||||||
36th | 1925 – 1930 | Allan D. Taylor | Conservative | Ewart C. Atkinson | Conservative | ||
37th | 1931 – 1935 | ||||||
38th | 1935 – 1939 | Gabriel F. Smith | Liberal | Walter C. Lawson | Liberal | ||
39th | 1939 – 1944 | Frederic McGrand | Liberal | ||||
40th | 1944 – 1948 | Gordon R. Lawson | Liberal | ||||
41st | 1948 – 1952 | ||||||
42nd | 1952 – 1956 | Paul Fearon | Progressive Conservative | Paul Mersereau | Progressive Conservative | ||
43rd | 1957 – 1960 | ||||||
44th | 1960 – 1963 | R. Lee MacFarlane | Liberal | William R. Duffie | Liberal | ||
45th | 1963 – 1967 | ||||||
46th | 1967 – 1970 | Douglas A. Flower | Liberal | ||||
47th | 1970 – 1974 | Reginald W. Mabey | Progressive Conservative | Horace Smith | Progressive Conservative | ||
Riding dissolved into Oromocto and Sunbury (1974–1994) | |||||||
Election results
1970 New Brunswick general election | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Party | Candidate | Votes | Elected | |||||
Progressive Conservative | Reginald W. Mabey | 4,209 | ||||||
Progressive Conservative | Horace Smith | 4,110 | ||||||
Liberal | William R. Duffie | 3,427 | ||||||
Liberal | Douglas Flower | 2,902 | ||||||
New Democratic | William Robert Ross | 226 | ||||||
New Democratic | Lawrence John Lamont | 205 |
1967 New Brunswick general election | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Party | Candidate | Votes | Elected | |||||
Liberal | William R. Duffie | 4,653 | ||||||
Liberal | Douglas A. Flower | 3,980 | ||||||
Progressive Conservative | ? Mockler | 3,341 | ||||||
Progressive Conservative | ? Fearon | 3,152 |
gollark: How about `qhjdndjwiqkdfbehqrfpfndbwbqvsjsk` and the like?
gollark: *does not understand above text*
gollark: If a site is accidentally doing stuff which it shouldn't, then it can probably be temporarily turned off by blocking its key (or IP, anyway); if it's someone deliberately doing stuff which they shouldn't, it probably won't even need the API.
gollark: You can probably break an accidentally-doing-silly-stuff one by making its API key not work, but not a deliberately-doing-bad-stuff-one.
gollark: If it's just spamming viewpages, that's not API-based.
References
- died in 1822
- died in 1881
- died in 1883
- named to federal cabinet
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.