16th General Assembly of Newfoundland
16th General Assembly of Newfoundland | |
---|---|
Colonial Building seat of the Newfoundland government and the House of Assembly from January 28, 1850, to July 28, 1959. | |
History | |
Founded | 1890 |
Disbanded | 1893 |
Preceded by | 15th General Assembly of Newfoundland |
Succeeded by | 17th General Assembly of Newfoundland |
Leadership | |
Premier | William Whiteway, Liberal |
Elections | |
Last election | 1889 Newfoundland general election |
The members of the 16th General Assembly of Newfoundland were elected in the Newfoundland general election held in November 1889. The general assembly sat from 1890 to 1893.
The Liberal Party led by William Whiteway formed the government.[1]
George Emerson was chosen as speaker.[2]
Sir Terence O'Brien served as colonial governor of Newfoundland.[3]
Members of the Assembly
The following members were elected to the assembly in 1889:[4]
Member | Electoral district | Affiliation | First elected / previously elected |
---|---|---|---|
Edward White | Bay de Verde | Liberal Party | 1889 |
Henry J. B. Woods | 1889 | ||
Donald Morison | Bonavista | Reform | 1888 |
Samuel Blandford | Liberal Party | 1889 | |
Alfred B. Morine | Reform | 1886 | |
James Murray | Burgeo-La Poile | Independent | 1889 |
Edward Rothwell | Burin | Liberal Party | 1889 |
Dr. James S. Tait | 1889 | ||
James S. Winter | Conservative Party | 1873, 1893 | |
William Duff | Carbonear | Liberal Party | 1889 |
George Shea | Ferryland | Independent | 1885 |
Daniel J. Greene | Independent | 1878 | |
James Rolls | Fogo | Reform | 1885 |
John Studdy | Fortune Bay | Liberal Party | 1889 |
William H. Whiteley | Harbour Grace | Liberal Party | 1889 |
Eli Dawe | 1889 | ||
Robert S. Munn | Reform | 1889 | |
Frank J. Morris | Harbour Main | Liberal Party | 1889 |
William Woodford | 1889 | ||
George Emerson | Placentia and St. Mary's | Liberal Party | 1885 |
Richard O'Dwyer | 1885 | ||
James McGrath | 1889 | ||
James A. Clift | Port de Grave | Liberal Party | 1889 |
George C. Fearn | St. Barbe | Liberal Party | 1889 |
Michael H. Carty | St. George's | Reform | 1882 |
Thomas J. Murphy | St. John's East | Liberal Party | 1886 |
Dr. John J. Dearin | 1873, 1882, 1889 | ||
Jeremiah Halleran | 1889 | ||
Edward Morris | St. John's West | Liberal Party | 1885 |
James Day | 1889 | ||
Lawrence Gearin | 1889 | ||
William Whiteway | Trinity | Liberal Party | 1859, 1873, 1889 |
Robert Bond | 1882 | ||
David C. Webber | 1889 | ||
Edward P. Burgess | Twillingate | Liberal Party | 1889 |
Jabez P. Thompson | 1889 | ||
Thomas Peyton | 1889 |
Notes:
By-elections
By-elections were held to replace members for various reasons:
Electoral district | Member elected | Affiliation | Election date | Reason |
---|---|---|---|---|
Burin | James S. Winter[nb 1] | Conservative | 1892 | E Rothwell died in 1892[4] |
Notes:
- ^ Winter was named to the Supreme Court in May 1893
References
- ^ Hiller, J.K. (1994). "Whiteway, Sir William Vallance". In Cook, Ramsay; Hamelin, Jean (eds.). Dictionary of Canadian Biography. Vol. XIII (1901–1910) (online ed.). University of Toronto Press.
- ^ "The Speaker of the House of Assembly". House of Assembly.
- ^ "O'Brien, Sir John Terence Nicholls". Newfoundland and Labrador Heritage. Memorial University.
- ^ a b "Elections". Encyclopedia of Newfoundland and Labrador. pp. 696–98.
- v
- t
- e
- 1st (1833–1838)
- 2nd (1838–1843)
- 3rd (1843–1848)
- 4th (1848–1853)
- 5th (1853–1855)
- 6th (1855–1860)
- 7th (1860–1861)
- 8th (1861–1865)
- 9th (1865–1869)
- 10th (1869–1873)
- 11th (1873–1874)
- 12th (1874–1878)
- 13th (1878–1882)
- 14th (1882–1885)
- 15th (1885–1889)
- 16th (1889–1893)
- 17th (1893–1897)
- 18th (1897–1900)
- 19th (1900–1904)
- 20th (1904–1908)
- 21st (1908–1909)
- 22nd (1909–1913)
- 23rd (1913–1919)
- 24th (1919–1923)
- 25th (1923–1924)
- 26th (1924–1928)
- 27th (1928–1932)
- 28th (1932–1934)
- 29th (1949–1951)
- 30th (1951–1956)
- 31st (1956–1959)
- 32nd (1959–1962)
- 33rd (1962–1966)
- 34th (1966–1971)
- 35th (1971–1972)
- 36th (1972–1975)
- 37th (1975–1979)
- 38th (1979–1982)
- 39th (1982–1985)
- 40th (1985–1989)
- 41st (1989–1993)
- 42nd (1993–1996)
- 43rd (1996–1999)
- 44th (1999–2003)
- 45th (2003–2007)
- 46th (2007–2011)
- 47th (2011–2015)
- 48th (2015–2019)
- 49th (2019–2021)
- 50th (2021–present)