Mid_Surrey_(UK_Parliament_constituency)

Mid Surrey (UK Parliament constituency)

Mid Surrey (UK Parliament constituency)

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Mid Surrey was a county constituency in Surrey, England: 1868 1885. It returned two Members of Parliament to the House of Commons of the UK Parliament elected by the bloc vote system.

Quick Facts County, 1868–1885 ...

History

The constituency was created under the Second Reform Act for the 1868 general election, and abolished by the Redistribution of Seats Act 1885 for the 1885 general election.

Political history

The seat elected a brief series of Conservatives.

Successor seats

The 1885 Act took from 2 to 16 the metropolitan seats in the north-east of the county that is the zone north-east of Wimbledon and Croydon coming from 1889 into the newly formed County of London. It also founded six single-member county constituencies (seats) to cover the rump bulk of the county, commonly referred to at the time as the non-metropolitan county. The Act thus abolished the West, Mid and East Surrey divisions double seat-areas that comprised the county. As Surrey was now split into single-representative areas this met a Chartist objective, discouraging the frequent collusion between candidates or parties which had beset multi-member constituencies (specifically plurality-at-large voting, for which "bloc(k) vote" in Britain was the term used). These six distinctly county (non-metropolitan) divisions the Act numbered, named (and detailed as summarised in outline below):[1]

  1. The North-Western or Chertsey Division (usually recorded as Chertsey, Surrey N.W. or North-West) - included Woking and Egham
  2. The South-Western or Guildford Division (as style shown above) - included Godalming, Farnham and surrounds
  3. The South-Eastern or Reigate Division (as style shown above) - included Dorking sessional division save for two parishes in No. 4.
  4. The Mid or Epsom Division (as style shown above) - included Kingston's southern and eastern sessional division components
  5. The Kingston Division (invariably Kingston or Kingston-upon-Thames) - included Richmond
  6. The North-Eastern or Wimbledon Division (as style shown above) - included sessional division of Croydon except its core and north in the Metropolis; plus Caterham, Chelsham, Farley, Warlingham.

Boundaries

1868–1885: The Hundreds of Kingston, Reigate and so much of that of Wallington as lay to the west of the parishes of Croydon and Sanderstead, and so much of the Hundred of Brixton as lay to the west of the parishes of Streatham, Clapham and Lambeth.[2]

Members of Parliament

More information Election, 1st Member ...

Election results

Elections in the 1860s

More information Party, Candidate ...

Elections in the 1870s

Brodrick succeeded to the peerage, becoming Viscount Midleton and causing a by-election.

More information Party, Candidate ...
More information Party, Candidate ...

Baggallay was appointed Solicitor-General for England and Wales, requiring a by-election.

More information Party, Candidate ...

Baggallay was appointed a Judge of The Court of Appeal, and resigned.

More information Party, Candidate ...

Elections in the 1880s

More information Party, Candidate ...

Peek's resignation caused a by-election.

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References

  1. "The public general acts". Proprietors of the Law Journal Reports.
  2. "Representation of the People Act 1867" (PDF). Retrieved 27 July 2017.
  3. Craig, F. W. S., ed. (1977). British Parliamentary Election Results 1832-1885 (1st ed.). London: Macmillan Press. p. 467. ISBN 978-1-349-02349-3.
  4. "Mid Surrey Election". Surrey Comet. 14 November 1868. p. 1. Retrieved 18 March 2018 via British Newspaper Archive.
  5. "Mr. Marsh Nelson at Kingston". Surrey Comet. 14 November 1868. p. 5. Retrieved 18 March 2018 via British Newspaper Archive.

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