Kings (provincial electoral district)
Kings was a provincial electoral district in Nova Scotia, Canada that, at the time of its dissolution, elected two members to the Nova Scotia House of Assembly. It existed from 1867 until 1956, when Kings County was divided into the three electoral districts of Kings North, Kings South and Kings West. Apart from a brief period between 1933 and 1945, during which one member was elected, Kings always elected two members to the Legislature.[1]
Members of the Legislative Assembly
Kings elected the following members to the Legislature:[1]
Legislature | Years | Member | Party | Member | Party | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
45th | 1953-1956 | Edward Haliburton | Progressive Conservative | George Arthur Boggs | Progressive Conservative | ||
44th | 1949-1953 | David Durell Sutton | Liberal | William H. Pipe | Liberal | ||
43rd | 1945-1949 | John Alexander McDonald | Liberal | ||||
42nd | 1941-1945 | seat declared vacant | |||||
41st | 1937-1941 | ||||||
40th | 1933-1937 | ||||||
39th | 1928-1933 | George C. Nowlan | Liberal-Conservative | Reginald Tucker Caldwell | Liberal-Conversative | ||
38th | 1925-1928 | ||||||
37th | 1923-1925 | James Sealy | Liberal | John Alexander McDonald | Liberal | ||
1920-1923 | Harry H. Wickwire | Liberal | |||||
36th | 1916-1920 | James E. Kinsman | Liberal-Conservative | ||||
35th | 1911-1916 | Archibald M. Covert | Liberal | ||||
34th | 1911* | Charles A. Campbell | Unity Reform Party | ||||
1906-1910 | Brenton Dodge | Liberal | |||||
33rd | 1901-1906 | Harry H. Wickwire | Liberal | ||||
32nd | 1897-1901 | ||||||
31st | 1894-1897 | ||||||
30th | 1890-1894 | Alfred P. Welton | Liberal | Barclay Webster | Liberal-Conservative | ||
29th | 1886-1890 | Leander Rand | Liberal | William C. Bill | Liberal-Conservative | ||
28th | 1882-1886 | Thomas R. Harris | Liberal-Conservative | Thomas Lewis Dodge | Liberal | ||
27th | 1878-1882 | James Stainforth MacDonald | Liberal-Conservative | William C. Bill | Liberal-Conservative | ||
26th | 1874-1878 | Douglas Benjamin Woodworth | Liberal-Conservative | John Burton North | Independent | ||
25th | 1871-1874 | Daniel Charles Moore | Liberal-Conservative | ||||
24th | 1867-1871 | Edward L. Brown | Anti-Confederation Party | David M. Dickie | Anti-Confederation Party |
*NB Dodge died in office on December 30, 1910. Wickwire was elected to replace him in a by-election on January 31, 1911. Wickwire was then re-elected in the Nova Scotia general election held on June 14, 1911[1].
References
- "Electoral History for Kings County" (PDF). Nova Scotia Legislature. August 2, 2019. Retrieved April 17, 2020.
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