Lethbridge (provincial electoral district)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Lethbridge is was a provincial electoral district in Alberta, Canada.
The riding has existed twice. The first incarnation was in 1905 when Alberta first became a province. Lethbridge covered a large patch of southern Alberta, It was broken in to Lethbridge District and Lethbridge City in 1909. After Lethbridge District was broken up into Taber and Little Bow in 1913, Lethbridge City was all that remained, using the Lethbridge name, in 1921 Lethbridge was reformed after City was dropped from the name. In 1971 Lethbridge was split into two districts: Lethbridge East and Lethbridge West.
The riding was named after the Southern Alberta city of Lethbridge.
Contents |
[edit] Election results 1905–1906, 1921–1967
[edit] First past the post, 1948–1967
Party | 1967 | 1963 | 1959 | 1955 | 1952 | 1948 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Liberal | John Boras 2,237 |
Allen Cullen 3,786 |
Robery Jeacock 1,525 |
A.J. Cullen 3,361 |
Rex Tennant 1,901 |
H.B. McLaughlin 1,768 |
Conservative / Progressive Conservative | Wilfred Bowns 4,128 |
Thomas Spanos 2,917 |
C.J. Black 883 |
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Social Credit | John Landeryou 6,155 |
John Landeryou 6,975 |
John Landeryou 7,250 |
John Landeryou 4,788 |
John Landeryou 4,975 |
John Landeryou 3,829 |
C.C.F. / N.D.P. | Klaas Buijert 1,335 |
James Taylor 820 |
James Helwig 490 |
Emil Vaselenak 1,441 |
[edit] Single transferable vote, 1926–1940, 1944
[edit] 1944
Year | Count | Candidate | Party | Votes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1944 | 2nd | John Landeryou | Social Credit | 2,692 |
2nd | D.H. Elton | Independent | 2,388 | |
1944 | 1st | John Landeryou | Social Credit | 2,367 |
1st | D.H. Elton | Independent | 2,247 | |
1st | B.F. Tanner | Cooperative Commonwealth | 1,464 | |
1st | Eugene Scully | Progressive Labour | 219 |
[edit] 1926 - 1930
Year | Count | Candidate | Party | Votes | Year | Count | Candidate | Party | Votes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1930 | 2nd | Andrew Smeaton | Labour | 2,238 | 1926 | 2nd | Andrew Smeaton | Labour | 1,962 |
2nd | W.D.L. Hardie | Independent | 1,978 | 2nd | R.R. Davidson | Conservative | 1,713 | ||
1930 | 1st | Andrew Smeaton | Labour | 2,036 | 1930 | 1st | Andrew Smeaton | Labour | 1,584 |
1st | W.D.L. Hardie | Independent | 1,598 | 1st | R.R. Davidson | Conservative | 1,459 | ||
1st | Robert Barrowman | Independent | 1,005 | 1st | W.S. Galbraith | Liberal | 1,225 |
[edit] First past the post, 1905 - 1906, 1921, 1935 - 1940
Party | 1940 | 1937 | 1935 | 1921 | 1906 | 1905 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Liberal | Robert Barrowman 1,946 |
William Simmons 543 |
Leverett DeVeber 639 |
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Conservative | G.W. Green 341 |
A.E. Keffer 231 |
William Ives 491 |
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Social Credit | A.E. Smith 2,760 |
A.J. Burnap 3,279 |
Hans Wight 3,700 |
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Labour | Andrew Smeaton 654 |
John Marsh 1,374 |
T.H. Sherman 463 |
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Unity | Peter M. Campbell 4,099 |
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Independent | Peter M. Campbell 4,318 |
John Smith Stewart 2,252 |
[edit] Plebiscite results
[edit] 1948 Electrification Plebiscite
District results from the first province wide plebiscite on electricity regulation.
Option A | Option B |
---|---|
Are you in favour of the generation and distribution of electricity being continued by the Power Companies? | Are you in favour of the generation and distribution of electricity being made a publicly owned utility administered by the Alberta Government Power Commission? |
4,237 64.90% | 2,291 35.10% |
Province wide result: Option A passed. |
[edit] By-election reasons
- April 12, 1906—Appointment of Mr. Leverett DeVeber to the Canadian Senate
- December 2, 1937—Resignation of Hans Wight