Hallamshire (UK Parliament constituency)

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Hallamshire
County constituency
Created: 1885
Abolished: 1918
Type: House of Commons

Hallamshire was a Parliamentary constituency covering the Hallamshire district of England. The constituency was created in 1885 and abolished in 1918. It should not be confused with Sheffield Hallam. The seat was a large geographical area which in the west included the moors of the Pennines (Howden Moors, Midhope Moors, Broom Read Moor, Bradfield Moor and Hallam Moor), but came down from the hills in the centre to include better farmland north of Sheffield around Ecclesfield. In the north-east it included part of the South Yorkshire coalfield and some mining villages. In the south, the residents of Sheffield who owned their freeholds could vote in this division.

For twenty years the Member of Parliament was a prominent Sheffield cutler and steel manufacturer, Sir Frederick Mappin, who was able to unite the middle-class voters from Sheffield with the hill-farmers and the miners to vote for him as a Liberal. When he retired the local Liberal association selected a miner, John Wadsworth, who was President of the Yorkshire Miners Association in 1903 and sponsored by the Miners' Federation of Great Britain. With the other MFGB sponsored MPs, Wadsworth transferred to the Labour Party in 1909.

Contents

[edit] Boundaries

The consistuency covered an area north and west of inner Sheffield. On its creation in 1885 it was defined as containing the Municipal Borough of Sheffield, and the Parishes of Bradfield, Ecclesfield, Wath-upon-Dearne, Brampton Bierlow, Wentworth, Handsworth, Tankersley, Nether Hoyland, and Wortley.

The Municipal Borough of Sheffield was also a Parliamentary Borough and so the only electors from that area entitled to vote in Hallamshire were those who were freeholders. They could, of course, also exercise their vote in the appropriate division of the Parliamentary Borough of Sheffield. However there were always considerable numbers of Sheffield freeholders who voted at elections for Hallamshire according to Henry Pelling in his Social Geography of British Elections 1885-1910.

This anomaly of the electoral system was ended in 1918. The remainder of the constituency formed the cores of both the Penistone and Wentworth constituencies in boundary changes made that year.

[edit] Member of Parliament

[edit] Election results

General Election 1885: Hallamshire
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Liberal Frederick Mappin 6,454 59.2
Conservative Hon. Charles Wentworth-Fitzwilliam 4,451 40.8
Majority 2,003 18.4
Turnout 82.8
Liberal hold Swing
General Election 1886: Hallamshire
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Liberal Frederick Mappin unopposed
General Election 1892: Hallamshire
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Liberal Frederick Mappin unopposed


General Election 1895: Hallamshire
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Liberal Frederick Mappin 5,949 54.1
Conservative Frank Hatchard 5,054 45.9
Majority 895 8.2
Turnout 76.0
Liberal hold Swing
General Election 1900: Hallamshire
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Liberal Frederick Mappin 6,688 57.5
Conservative Frank Hatchard 4,938 42.5
Majority 1,750 15.0
Turnout 74.5
Liberal hold Swing
General Election 1906: Hallamshire
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Lib-Lab John Wadsworth 8,375 55.2
Conservative Frederic Kelley 6,807 44.8
Majority 1,568 10.4
Turnout 83.9
Liberal hold Swing
General Election January 1910: Hallamshire
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Labour John Wadsworth 10,193 62.2
Conservative T. Sutton Timmis 6,185 37.8
Majority 4,008 24.4
Turnout 82.2
Labour gain from Liberal Swing
General Election December 1910: Hallamshire
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Labour John Wadsworth 8,708 59.9
Conservative D. T. Smith 5,837 40.1
Majority 2,871 19.8
Turnout 73.0
Labour hold Swing

[edit] Sources