Nelson (provincial electoral district)
- This article is about the provincial riding in British Columbia. For the federal riding in Manitoba see Nelson (electoral district).
Nelson was the name of a provincial electoral district in the Canadian province of British Columbia. It first appeared on the hustings in the general election of 1916 in place of the former riding of Nelson City. Its last appearance was in the 1928 election. Following redistribution, the Nelson area was combined with the Creston riding to create Nelson-Creston, which first appeared in the 1933 election.
For other current and historical electoral districts in the Kootenay region, please see Kootenay (electoral districts).
Demographics
Population, 1916 |
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Population change, 1916–1931 |
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Area (km²) |
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Population density (people per km²) |
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Electoral history
Note: Winners in each election are in bold.
14th British Columbia election, 1916 |
Party |
Candidate |
Votes |
% |
±% |
Expenditures |
|
Independent Liberal 1 |
George Bell |
125 |
10.09% |
|
unknown |
|
Liberal |
Archie Mainwaring Johnson |
507 |
40.92% |
|
unknown |
|
Conservative |
William Oliver Rose |
607 |
48.99% |
|
unknown |
Total valid votes |
1,239 |
100.00% |
|
Total rejected ballots |
|
|
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Turnout |
% |
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|
1 When identified as a "Socialist" in the election results printed in a Vancouver daily, Bloomer wrote a letter to object and called himself an Independent |
The Nelson riding was redistributed after the 1928 election. In the 1933 election the Nelson-Kootenay Lake area was represented by the new riding of Nelson-Creston.
Sources
Elections BC Historical Returns