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Belfast (UK Parliament constituency)
UK Parliamentary constituency in Ireland, 1801–1885
UK Parliamentary constituency in Ireland, 1801–1885
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| name | Belfast |
| type | borough |
| region | Ireland |
| county | County Antrim |
| borough | Belfast |
| parliament | uk |
| year | 1801 |
| abolished | 1885 |
| seats | |
| previous | Belfast (IHC) |
| next |
|}}
Belfast was an Irish borough constituency in the House of Commons of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland. Comprising the city of Belfast, it elected one Member of Parliament (MP) from 1801 to 1832, and then two MPs from 1832 until the constituency was divided by the Redistribution of Seats Act 1885 before the 1885 general election.
Representation
Prior to 1801, the parliamentary borough of was a two-seat constituency in the Irish House of Commons. Under the Acts of Union 1800, the Kingdom of Ireland was joined with the Kingdom of Great Britain to form the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland. Belfast was represented from 1801 in the United Kingdom House of Commons by one MP. Its MP in 1801 to the First Parliament of the United Kingdom was chosen by lot.
Under the Representation of the People (Ireland) Act 1832, its representation was increased to two seats. Under the Redistribution of Seats Act 1885, the representation of the parliamentary borough was increased to four seats, and it was divided into four separate divisions.
Boundaries and boundary changes
This constituency was the parliamentary borough of Belfast in County Antrim. In 1832 and 1868 the boundaries of that borough were extended.
1832 boundaries
The boundaries were defined by the Parliamentary Boundaries (Ireland) Act 1832 as:
1868 boundaries
The Representation of the People (Ireland) Act 1868, provided that all that part of the borough situate beyond the limits of the parliamentary borough as defined in 1832, but within the municipal limits, should form part of the borough for all purposes connected with the election of a member or members to serve in parliament for the borough. See Belfast Borough Extension Act 1853 (16 & 17 Vict.) c. 129, which defined the boundaries of the borough as follows:
The boundary is shown as 'Municipal Boundary' on the second edition of the Ordnance Survey maps of Ireland.
1885 division
Under the Redistribution of Seats Act 1885, the parliamentary borough of Belfast was further expanded and defined as:
The present parliamentary borough of Belfast, and
:in the parish of Holywood, County Down, the townlands of Ballymaghan, Ballymisert, Strandtown and Strandtown Town, Ballyhackamore and Ballyhackamore Town, and Ballycloghan, and :in the parish of Knockbreda, County Down, the townlands of Knock, Multyhogy, and Ballyrushboy, and :in the parish of Shankill, County Armagh, the townlands of Lower Malone, that part of Upper Malone bounded on the south by the centre of the road running northward and westward for about 80 chains from Shaw's Bridge, Ballymurphy, Ballymagarry, Ballygomartin, Ballysillan Lower, Legoniel and Legoniel Town, Old Park and Old Park Town, Skegoniell, that part of Ballyaghagan which adjoins the Antrim Road (namely the whole of the part east of the Antrim Road, and the part west of the Antrim Road which is within 22 chains of that road), Lowwood, Greencastle and Greencastle Town.}}
It was divided into four single-member divisions: Belfast East, Belfast North, Belfast South and Belfast West.
Electoral system and electorate
The parliamentary representatives of the borough were elected using the bloc vote for two-member elections and first past the post for single-member ones.
Until 1832 the electorate were the members of Belfast Corporation. This had long been resented by reformers as it made the constituency a pocket borough of the Marquess of Donegall.
In 1784 a petition was sent to the Parliament of Ireland.
That Belfast is a large and populous town, containing above 15,000 inhabitants, carrying on a very extensive foreign commerce, as well as inland trade, and paying annually upwards of £80,000 towards the public revenue.
That this numerous body of people not being represented in your Hon House, are, contrary to the fundamental principle of the constitution, governed by laws to which they give no assent; for although the borough of Belfast sends two Members to parliament, yet those members are returned (under the immediate direction of a noble peer) by five or six Burgesses, in the appointment of whom your Petitioners have no share, and therefore the members so returned cannot in any sense, be deemed the Representatives of your Petitioners."}}
In 1832 the electorate was considerably extended by the Representation of the People (Ireland) Act 1832. Boroughs in Ireland were given a uniform franchise for the first time. The vote was given to occupiers of land valued at least £10 and resident freemen by birth or servitude (descent from or apprenticeship to an existing freeman of the borough) or who were admitted before March 1831.
Members of Parliament
| Election | 1st member | 1st party | 2nd member | 2nd party | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1801 | Tories (British political party)}}" | Sir (James) Edward May, Bt | Tory | |||
| 1802 | ||||||
| 1806 | ||||||
| 1807 | ||||||
| 1812 | ||||||
| 1814 by-election | Tories (British political party)}}" | Stephen Edward May | Tory | |||
| 1816 by-election | Tories (British political party)}}" | John Michel | Tory | |||
| 1818 | Tories (British political party)}}" | Arthur Chichester | Tory | |||
| 1820 | Tories (British political party)}}" | Earl of Belfast | Tory | |||
| 1826 | ||||||
| 1830 | Whigs (British political party)}}" | Sir Arthur Chichester, Bt | Whig | |||
| 1831 | ||||||
| 1832 | Tories (British political party)}}" | Lord Arthur Chichester | Tory | Whigs (British political party)}}" | ||
| 1834 | Conservative Party (UK)}}" | Conservative | ||||
| 1835 | Whigs (British political party)}}" | John McCance | Whig | Conservative Party (UK)}}" | ||
| 1835 by-election | Conservative Party (UK)}}" | George Dunbar | Conservative | |||
| 1837 | Whigs (British political party)}}" | James Gibson | Whig | Whigs (British political party)}}" | ||
| 1838 by-election | Conservative Party (UK)}}" | George Dunbar | Conservative | Conservative Party (UK)}}" | ||
| 1841 | Conservative Party (UK)}}" | William Gillilan Johnson | Conservative | |||
| 1842 by-election | Whigs (British political party)}}" | David Robert Ross | Whig | |||
| 1845 by-election | Conservative Party (UK)}}" | Lord John Chichester | Conservative | |||
| 1847 | Whigs (British political party)}}" | Robert James Tennent | Whig | Peelite}}" | ||
| 1852 | Conservative Party (UK)}}" | Richard Davison | Conservative | Conservative Party (UK)}}" | ||
| 1859 | ||||||
| 1860 by-election | Conservative Party (UK)}}" | Samuel Gibson Getty | Conservative | |||
| 1865 | ||||||
| 1866 by-election | Conservative Party (UK)}}" | Sir Charles Lanyon | Conservative | |||
| 1868 | Liberal Party (UK)}}" | Thomas McClure | Liberal | Conservative Party (UK)}}" | ||
| 1874 | Conservative Party (UK)}}" | James Corry | Conservative | |||
| 1878 by-election | Conservative Party (UK)}}" | William Ewart | Conservative | |||
| 1880 | ||||||
| 1885 | constituency divided: see North, East, South and West divisions |
;Notes:
- (1) Lord Arthur Chichester and James Emerson Tennent changed party allegiance in 1834 (from Liberal to Conservative).
- (2) Lord John Ludford Chichester changed party allegiance by 1847 (part of Peelite faction).
Elections
After 1832, when registration of voters was introduced, a turnout figure is given for contested elections. In two-member elections (when the exact number of voters is unknown) this is calculated by dividing the number of votes by two. To the extent that voters did not use both their votes this will be an underestimate of turnout. If the electorate figure is unknown the last known electorate figure is used to provide an estimate of turnout.
Where a party had more than one candidate in one or both of a pair of successive elections change is calculated for each individual candidate, otherwise change is based on the party vote.
Elections in the 1800s
Elections in the 1810s
-
Death of May
-
Appointment of May as Collector of Customs in Belfast Port
Elections in the 1820s
Elections in the 1830s
|reg. electors = 13
|reg. electors = 13
|reg. electors = 1,659
- J. Emerson Tennent ceased to support Lord Grey in 1834 (see Emerson Tennent's article in The Oxford Dictionary of National Biography).*
|reg. electors = 2,137 Note: Stooks Smith suggests there were 1,451 registered electors. Walker gives the electorate figure as above.
- Death of McCance
|reg. electors = 2,458 Note: Stooks Smith suggests there were 1,508 registered electors. Walker gives the electorate figure as above. Stooks Smith also indicates that 'Mr Tennent resigned in consequence of a decision of the Assessors'.
|reg. electors = 3,641 Stooks Smith suggests there were 1,926 registered electors. Walker gives the electorate figure as above.
- 8 March 1838: On petition Gibson and the Earl of Belfast were unseated and Emerson Tennent and Dunbar declared elected
Elections in the 1840s
|reg. electors = 5,907 Note: 1,740 electors voted. Stooks Smith suggests there were 1,937 registered electors. Walker gives the electorate figure as above.
- On petition Emerson Tennent and Johnson unseated and new writ issued
|reg. electors = 4,234 Note: Stooks Smith comments that 'a compromise was entered into by which one of each party was to be returned'.
- Resignation of Emerson Tennent
|reg. electors = 9,672
Elections in the 1850s
|reg. electors = 2,697
|reg. electors = 3,518
- Appointment of Cairns as Solicitor-General
|reg. electors = 3,303
Elections in the 1860s
- Resignation of Davison
|reg. electors = 3,415
- Appointment of Cairns as Attorney-General
|reg. electors = 3,615
- Appointment of Cairns as Lord Justice of Appeal in Chancery (of England and Wales)
|reg. electors = 3,615
|reg. electors = 12,168
Elections in the 1870s
|reg. electors = 15,979
- Appointment of Johnston as Inspector of Fisheries
|reg. electors = 20,005
Elections in the 1880s
|reg. electors = 21,188
- Constituency divided in the 1885 redistribution
References
- The Parliaments of England by Henry Stooks Smith (1st edition published in three volumes 1844–50), 2nd edition edited (in one volume) by F. W. S. Craig (Political Reference Publications 1973)
- Parliamentary Election Results in Ireland, 1801-1922, edited by B. M. Walker (Royal Irish Academy 1978)
References
- "Belfast".
- [https://books.google.com/books?id=-3cDAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA239 Parliamentary Boundaries (Ireland) Act, 1832, Schedule, paragraph 4]
- [https://archive.org/stream/statutesunitedk31britgoog#page/n254/mode/2up Section 9]
- "The public general acts". Proprietors of the Law Journal Reports.
- "CHICHESTER, George Hamilton, earl of Belfast (1797-1883), of Cowes, I.o.W. and 23 Arlington Street, Mdx.".
- (1842). "The Register of Parliamentary Contested Elections: Containing the Uncontested Elections Since 1830". Simpkin, Marshall, & Co..
- (10 January 1833). "Mayo Constitution".
- (27 December 1832). "Leeds Intelligencer".
- {{cite DNB. George Clement. Boase
- (1838). "The Assembled Commons or Parliamentary Biographer".
- (8 August 1837). "Belfast Election". Drogheda Journal, or Meath & Louth Advertiser.
- (23 August 1842). "Belfast Election". Sussex Advertiser.
- (14 August 1847). "Irish Members Returned". Tipperary Vindicator.
- (14 August 1847). "The Irish Members". Dublin Weekly Nation.
- "Belfast".
- (1843). "Accounts and Papers of the House of Commons, Volume 50".
- (21 March 1857). "Irish Elections". Freeman's Journal.
- (6 February 1874). "Belfast Election". [[Derry Journal]].
- (4 April 1878). "Belfast Election". [[Falkirk Herald]].
- (1978). "Parliamentary Election Results in Ireland, 1801-1922". Royal Irish Academy.
- (20 March 1880). "Dr Seeds". [[Northern Whig]].
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