East Riding of Yorkshire (UK Parliament constituency)

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For 1997-present constituency, see East Yorkshire (UK Parliament constituency).
East Riding of Yorkshire
County constituency
Created: 1832
Abolished: 1885
Type: House of Commons
Members: 2

East Riding of Yorkshire was a parliamentary constituency in the East Riding of Yorkshire. It returned two Members of Parliament to the House of Commons of the Parliament of the United Kingdom.

The constituency was created by the Reform Act 1832, when the four-seat Yorkshire constituency was divided in three for the 1832 general election, and abolished by the Redistribution of Seats Act 1885. It was replaced for the 1885 general election by the new single-member constituencies of Buckrose, Holderness and Howdenshire.

Candidates were elected unopposed at most of the elections throughout its existence as a constituency; the only contested elections were in 1837, 1868 and 1880, on each of which occasions two Conservative candidates defeated a single Whig or Liberal.

[edit] Members of Parliament

Year 1st Member 1st Party 2nd Member 2nd Party
1832 constituency created by division of the Yorkshire constituency
1832 Richard Bethell Conservative Paul Thompson Whig
1837 Henry Broadley Conservative
1841 Lord Hotham Conservative
1851 Arthur Duncombe Conservative
1868 Christopher Sykes Conservative William Henry Harrison-Broadley Conservative
1885 constituency abolished: see Buckrose, Holderness and Howdenshire

This page incorporates information from Leigh Rayment's Peerage Page.