Carleton (1834–1974 electoral district)
Carleton was an electoral district that elected members to the Legislative Assembly of New Brunswick (now a province of Canada) from 1824 to 1974. Its boundaries were those of Carelton County and the number of members it returned varied over the years.
![]() | |
---|---|
Defunct provincial electoral district | |
Legislature | Legislative Assembly of New Brunswick |
District created | 1834 |
District abolished | 1973 |
First contested | 1835 |
Last contested | 1970 |
It was abolished in the 1973 electoral redistribution when the province moved to single member districts; at the time it elected three members and it was split into three single member districts: Carleton North, Carleton Centre and Carleton South.
During its time, three premiers represented the riding: James Kidd Flemming, Hugh John Flemming and Richard Hatfield.
Members of the Legislative Assembly
Election results
1970 New Brunswick general election | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Party | Candidate | Votes | Elected | |||||
Progressive Conservative | Richard B. Hatfield | 6,695 | ![]() | |||||
Progressive Conservative | Charles Gallagher | 6,104 | ![]() | |||||
Progressive Conservative | Edison Stairs | 5,881 | ![]() | |||||
Liberal | James E. Patterson | 2,711 | ||||||
Liberal | Charles E. Russell | 2,528 | ||||||
Liberal | Robert Caines | 2,523 | ||||||
New Democratic | Barry Morrison | 208 | ||||||
New Democratic | James Wallace, Jr. | 164 | ||||||
New Democratic | Samo Stehlik | 145 |
1967 New Brunswick general election | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Party | Candidate | Votes | Elected | |||||
Progressive Conservative | Richard B. Hatfield | 5,907 | ![]() | |||||
Progressive Conservative | Fred A. McCain | 5,581 | ![]() | |||||
Progressive Conservative | Edison Stairs | 5,536 | ![]() | |||||
Liberal | Robert R. "Bob" McCain | 4,559 | ||||||
Liberal | Hugh Tait | 4,059 | ||||||
Liberal | Christine Young | 3,702 |
Notes
- elected to federal seat
- died in office
- resigned to run for federal seat
- appointed postmaster of Woodstock
- resigned
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.