Saint John County (provincial electoral district)

Saint John County
New Brunswick electoral district
Defunct provincial electoral district
Legislature Legislative Assembly of New Brunswick
District created 1795
District abolished 1973
First contested 1795
Last contested 1970

Saint John County was a provincial electoral district for the Legislative Assembly of New Brunswick, Canada. It used a bloc voting system to elect candidates, and was created from Saint John in 1795 as Saint John City and County. It lost territory (and two members) to the riding of Saint John City in 1891 and was renamed Saint John County. It was abolished with the 1973 electoral redistribution, when the province moved to single-member ridings.

Members of the Legislative Assembly

Legislature Years Member Party Member Party Member Party Member Party
Saint John City and County
Riding created from Saint John
3rd 1795 – 1802     William Pagan Ind.     Jonathan Bliss Ind.     James Simonds Ind.     Bradford Gilbert Ind.
4th 1802 – 1804     Hugh Johnston Ind.     Edward Sands[1] Ind.
1804 – 1809     Munson Jarvis Ind.
5th 1809 – 1816     John Ward Ind.     Thomas Wetmore Ind.
6th 1817 – 1819     Thomas Millidge, Jr. Ind.     Craven Calverly Ind.
7th 1820     Zalmon Wheeler Ind.
8th 1821 – 1826     Ward Chipman, Jr.[2] Ind.     Andrew S. Ritchie Ind.     John McNeil Wilmot Ind.     Charles Simonds Ind.
1826 – 1827     Robert Parker Ind.
9th 1827 – 1830     John Richard Partelow Ind.     John Ward, Jr. Ind.
10th 1831 – 1834     Stephen Humbert Ind.
11th 1835 – 1837     George D. Robinson Ind.     John McNeil Wilmot Ind.
12th 1837 – 1842     John Jordan Ind.
13th 1843 – 1846     Robert Payne Ind.
14th 1847 – 1850     William Johnstone Ritchie[3] Lib.     Robert Duncan Wilmot Cons.
15th 1851     John Hamilton Gray Cons.     Charles Simonds[3] Ind.
1851 – 1854     John F. Godard Ind.     John Johnson Ind.
16th 1854 – 1856     John Richard Partelow[4] Ind.     William Johnstone Ritchie Lib.
17th 1856 – 1857     John F. Godard Ind.     Charles Simonds Ind.
18th 1857 – 1861     Richard Wright Ind.     John Waterbury Cudlip Ind.
19th 1862 – 1865     Timothy Anglin Lib.     John Jordan Ind.     Charles Nelson Skinner Lib.
20th 1865 – 1866     Robert Duncan Wilmot[5] Cons.     Joseph Coram Ind.
21st 1866 – 1870     Charles Nelson Skinner Lib.     John Hamilton Gray Cons.     James Quinton Ind.
22nd 1870 – 1874     George Edwin King Cons.     Edward Willis Ind.     Michael Whalen Maher Ind.     Joseph Coram[6] Ind.
23rd 1875     Henry A. Austin Ind.
1875 – 1878     William Elder[7] Ind.
24th 1879 – 1882     David McLellan Lib.     Robert J. Ritchie Ind.
25th 1883     William A. Quinton Lib.
1883 – 1886     Alfred Augustus Stockton Cons.
26th 1886 – 1890
27th 1890 – 1892     Harrison A. McKeown Lib.-Con.     James Rourke Lib.-Con.     William Shaw Lib.-Con.
Saint John County
28th 1892 – 1895     Albert T. Dunn Lib.     Harrison A. McKeown Lib.-Con.
29th 1896 – 1899     John McLeod Lib.
30th 1899 – 1903
31st 1903 – 1908     Robert C. Ruddick Ind.
32nd 1908 – 1909     James Lowell[8] Ind.     Harrison A. McKeown[9] Lib.-Con.
1909 – 1911     Allister F. Bentley Ind.
1911 – 1912     John Babington Macaulay Baxter[10] Cons.
33rd 1912 – 1917     Thomas B. Carson Cons.
34th 1917 – 1920
35th 1921 – 1922     L. Murray Curran Lib.
1922 – 1925     Allister H. Bentley Lib.
36th 1925– 1926     John Babington Macaulay Baxter[9] Cons.     Frank L. Potts[11] Cons.
1926 – 1930     H. Colby Smith Cons.
37th 1931
1931 – 1935     Robert McAllister Cons.
38th 1935 – 1939
39th 1939 – 1944     A. C. Smith[12] Cons.
40th 1944 – 1948     PC     PC
    Edward Claude Seeley PC
41st 1948 – 1952     Stephen D. Clark Lib.     Harold L. Atkinson Lib.
42nd 1952 – 1956     Arthur W. Carton PC     Robert McAllister PC
43rd 1957 – 1960
44th 1960 – 1963     C.A. McIlween PC     Parker D. Mitchell PC
45th 1963 – 1967     Rodman E. Logan PC
Riding dissolved into Saint John East and Saint John West

Election results


References

  1. election appealed
  2. appointed judge
  3. 1 2 resigned seat
  4. named Auditor General in 1855
  5. named to the Senate of Canada in 1867
  6. died in 1875
  7. died in 1883
  8. resigned to run for federal seat
  9. 1 2 resigned after being named a judge
  10. elected to federal seat
  11. died in 1926
  12. died in office
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