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Preston (UK Parliament constituency)
Parliamentary constituency in the United Kingdom, 1983 onwards
Parliamentary constituency in the United Kingdom, 1983 onwards
| Field | Value | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| name | Preston | |||
| parliament | uk | |||
| year | 1983 | |||
| type | Borough | |||
| previous | Preston North, Preston South | |||
| elects_howmany | One | |||
| year2 | 1529 | |||
| abolished2 | 1950 | |||
| next2 | Preston North, Preston South | |||
| elects_howmany2 | Two | |||
| year3 | 1295 | |||
| abolished3 | 1311 (at the earliest) | |||
| elects_howmany3 | Two | |||
| next3 | Preston (see above) | |||
| mp | Sir Mark Hendrick | |||
| party | Labour Co-operative | |||
| electorate | 72,946 (2023){{cite web | url= https://boundarycommissionforengland.independent.gov.uk/2023-review/the-2023-review-of-parliamentary-constituency-boundaries-in-england-volume-two-constituency-names-designations-and-composition/the-2023-review-of-parliamentary-constituency-boundaries-in-england-volume-two-constituency-names-designations-and-composition-north-west/#lg_preston-bc-72946 | ||
| title | The 2023 Review of Parliamentary Constituency Boundaries in England – Volume two: Constituency names, designations and composition – North West | |||
| publisher | Boundary Commission for England | |||
| access-date | 18 July 2024 | |||
| df | dmy | |||
| region | England | |||
| county | Lancashire | |||
| towns | Preston | |||
| european | North West England | |||
| image2 | [[File:North West England - Preston constituency.svg | 215px | alt=Map of constituency]] | caption2=Boundary of Preston in North West England |
|access-date=18 July 2024 Preston is a constituency represented in the House of Commons of the UK Parliament since 2000 by Sir Mark Hendrick, a member of the Labour Party and Co-operative Party.
History
;1295–1950 The seat was created for the Model Parliament and sent members until at least 1331 until a new (possibly confirmatory) grant of two members to Westminster followed. From 1529 extending unusually beyond the 19th century until the 1950 general election the seat had two-member representation. Party divisions tended to run stronger after 1931 before which two different parties' candidates frequently came first and second at elections under the bloc vote system.
In 1929, a recently elected Liberal, Sir William Jowitt decided to join the Labour Party and called for a by-election (which implies a single vacancy) to support this change of party, which he won, to take up for two years the position of Attorney General of England and Wales as part of the Government. He became the highest judge during the Attlee Ministry, the Lord High Chancellor of Great Britain and Speaker of the House of Lords under a then hereditary-dominated House leading to a Conservative majority. Consequently, he was selected to be elevated to a peerage as 1st Earl Jowitt. With no sons, he was to be the last Earl and wrote the Dictionary of English Law.
;1950–1983 Preston was abolished as a constituency by the Representation of the People Act 1948, being replaced by the Preston North and Preston South constituencies for the 1950 general election.
;1983–present Since the seat's revival after being split for 33 years into the larger North and South seats, all representatives have been members of the Labour Party.
The member from 1987 to 2000 was Audrey Wise, a member of the Socialist Campaign Group and reformer of maternity healthcare in opposition on the Select Committee.
Boundaries
Two-member seat
1832–1868: The old borough of Preston, and the township of Fishwick.
1868–1885: The existing parliamentary borough, excluding such part (if any) as lies on the south side of the River Ribble.
1885–1918: The existing parliamentary borough, so much of the municipal borough of Preston as was not already included in the parliamentary borough, so much of the parish of Lea, Ashton, Ingol, and Cottam, and of the parish of Penwortham, as were added to the municipal borough of Preston on 1 June 1889 by the Ribble Navigation and Preston Dock Act 1883, and the local government district of Fulwood.
1918–1950: County borough of Preston and urban district of Fulwood:
Single-member seat
1983–1997: The Borough of Preston wards of Ashton, Avenham, Brookfield, Central, Deepdale, Fishwick, Ingol, Larches, Moorbrook, Park, Ribbleton, St John's, St Matthew's, and Tulketh.
The boundaries of the re-established constituency corresponded to those of former County Borough, with Fulwood being included in the new seat of Ribble Valley.
1997–2010: The Borough of Preston wards of Ashton, Avenham, Brookfield, Central, Deepdale, Fishwick, Larches, Moor Park, Ribbleton, Riversway, St Matthew's, and Tulketh, and the Borough of South Ribble wards of Bamber Bridge Central, Bamber Bridge South, and Walton-le-Dale.
Ingol ward was transferred to Fylde. The Borough of South Ribble wards were transferred from the constituency of South Ribble.
2010–2018: The City of Preston wards of Ashton, Brookfield, Deepdale, Fishwick, Ingol, Larches, Moor Park, Ribbleton, Riversway, St George's, St Matthew's, Town Centre, Tulketh, and University.
Movements in 1997 reversed.
The ward of Lea was within the constituency of Fylde. The wards of Preston Rural North, Preston Rural East and the Fulwood wards (Cadley, College, Garrison, Greyfriars and Sharoe Green) were within the constituency of Wyre and Preston North. By the end of the review, the newly recommended Preston constituency had the smallest number of voters of an English constituency based on 2006 electorates.
2018–2024: In full: Ashton, Brookfield, City Centre, Deepdale, Fishwick and Frenchwood, Plungington, Ribbleton, St Matthews. In part: Cadley (shared with Wyre and Preston North), Ingol and Cottam (shared with Fylde), Lea and Larches (shared with Fylde).
The Local Government Boundary Commission for England modified Preston City Council's ward boundaries and names in 2018, which altered the contents, but not the boundaries of the Parliamentary constituency of Preston. Due to the changes, some wards were shared with neighbouring seats.
2024–present: The City of Preston wards of Ashton, Brookfield, Cadley, City Centre, Deepdale, Fishwick & Frenchwood, Garrison, Ingol & Cottam, Lea & Larches, Plungington, Ribbleton, and St Matthew's.
The constituency was expanded to bring the electorate within the permitted range by transferring in the part wards currently in the Fylde constituency, together with the remainder of the Cadley ward and the Garrison ward from Wyre and Preston North (abolished).
Members of Parliament
MPs 1295–1640
| Parliament | First member | Second member |
|---|---|---|
| 1295 | Willielmus fil' (filius) Pauli | Adam Russel |
| 1298 | Adam fil' Radulfi | Adam de Biri |
| 1300/1 | Willielmus fil' Paulini | |
| 1304/5 | Robertus fil' Willelmi de Preston | Hernricus fil' Willelmi del Tounhende |
| 1306/7 | Robertus fil' Rogeri | Ricardus Banastre |
| 1307 | Henricus del Krykestyle | Ricardus Banastre |
| 1326/7 | Laurencius Travers | Willelmus de Graistok |
| 1327 (Nov) | John Stakky | Henry Banastre |
| 1328/9 (Feb) | Willielmus fil' Paulini | Nicholaus de Preston |
| 1330 (Nov) | William fitz Paul | Henry de Haydock |
| 1331 (Sep) | Johannes fil' Galfridi | Willielmus fil' Johannis |
| 1331–1529 | No returns | |
| 1529 | Cristoferus Heydock | James Walton |
| 1536–1545 | No returns | |
| 1545 | Sir Ralph Sadler | John Bourne |
| 1547 | George Frevil | John Hales |
| 1552/3 (Mar) | Anthony Browne | Thomas Fleetwood |
| 1553 (Oct) | William Gerard | Anthony Browne |
| 1554 (Apr) | Thomas Ruthall | Willielmus Berners |
| 1554 (Nov) | Richard Shyrburne | John Sylyard |
| 1555 | John Arundell | John Herle |
| 1557/8 | Richard Sherbourne | Robert Southwell |
| 1559 (Jan) | Robert Aalford | Francis Goldsmith, *sat for Helston, |
| repl, by* Richard Cooke | ||
| 1562/3 | Gilbert Moreton | James Hodgkinson |
| 1571 | Edward Baeshe | Reginald Williams |
| 1572 | James Hodgkinson | George Horsey |
| 1584 (Nov) | William Fleetwood | Thomas Cromwell |
| 1586 | John Brograve | Sir Thomas Hesketh |
| 1588 (Oct) | Sir Thomas Hesketh | Michael Doughty |
| 1593 | James Dalton | Thomas Bulbeck |
| 1597 (Oct) | John Brograve | Sir John Stanhope |
| 1601 (Oct) | John Brograve | William Waad |
| 1604-1611 | Sir Vincent Skinner | William Holte |
| 1614 | Sir Edward Mosley | Henry Banister |
| 1621-1622 | Sir Edward Mosley | Sir William Pooley |
| 1624 | Sir Edward Mosley | Sir William Pooley, *sat for Sudbury, |
| repl. by* Sir William Hervey | ||
| 1625 | Sir William Hervey | Henry Banister |
| 1626 | George Garrard | Thomas Fanshawe |
| 1628 | Robert Carre | George Garrard |
| 1629-1640 | No Parliaments summoned |
MPs 1640–1950
| Year | p | 2 | date=March 2012}} | First party | Second member | Second party | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| April 1640 | Roundhead}}" | Richard Shuttleworth | Parliamentarian | Roundhead}}" | |||
| November 1640 | |||||||
| November 1642 | Standish died November 1642 - seat vacant | ||||||
| 1645 | William Langton | ||||||
| December 1648 | Shuttleworth excluded in Pride's Purge - seat vacant | Langton not recorded as sitting after Pride's Purge | |||||
| 1653 | Preston was unrepresented in the Barebones Parliament | ||||||
| 1654 | Colonel Richard Shuttleworth | *Preston had only one seat in the First and | |||||
| Second Parliaments of the Protectorate* | |||||||
| 1656 | |||||||
| January 1659 | Colonel Richard Standish | ||||||
| May 1659 | Not represented in the restored Rump | ||||||
| April 1660 | Alexander Rigby | ||||||
| August 1660 | Edward Rigby | ||||||
| 1661 | Geoffrey Rishton | ||||||
| 1667 | John Otway | ||||||
| February 1679 | Sir Robert Carr | ||||||
| April 1679 | Sir John Otway | ||||||
| 1681 | Sir Robert Carr | ||||||
| April 1685 | Sir Thomas Chicheley | ||||||
| June 1685 | Tories (British political party)}}" | Hon. Andrew Newport | Tory | ||||
| 1689 | James Stanley | ||||||
| March 1690 | Lord Willoughby de Eresby | ||||||
| December 1690 | Sir Edward Chisenhall | ||||||
| 1695 | Sir Thomas Stanley | ||||||
| 1698 | Henry Ashhurst | ||||||
| January 1701 | Edward Rigby | ||||||
| December 1701 | Thomas Molyneux | ||||||
| 1702 | Charles Zedenno Stanley | ||||||
| 1705 | Francis Annesley | ||||||
| 1706 | Arthur Maynwaring | ||||||
| 1708 | Henry Fleetwood | ||||||
| 1710 | Sir Henry Hoghton | ||||||
| 1713 | Edward Southwell | ||||||
| 1715 | Sir Henry Hoghton | ||||||
| 1722 | Daniel Pulteney | ||||||
| 1727 | Sir Henry Hoghton | ||||||
| 1732 | Nicholas Fazackerley | ||||||
| 1741 | James Shuttleworth | ||||||
| 1754 | Edmund Starkie | ||||||
| 1767 | Sir Peter Leicester | ||||||
| April 1768 | Sir Frank Standish | ||||||
| November 1768 | Whigs (British political party)}}" | Brigadier John Burgoyne | Whig | Tories (British political party)}}" | |||
| 1792 | Non-partisan}}" | William Shawe | Non-partisan | ||||
| 1795 | Whigs (British political party)}}" | Sir Henry Hoghton | Whig | ||||
| 1796 | Whigs (British political party)}}" | Edward Smith-Stanley | Whig | ||||
| 1802 | Tories (British political party)}}" | John Horrocks | Tory | ||||
| 1804 | Tories (British political party)}}" | Samuel Horrocks | Tory | ||||
| 1812 | Whigs (British political party)}}" | Edmund Hornby | Whig | ||||
| 1826 | Whigs (British political party)}}" | Hon. Edward Smith-Stanley | Whig | Whigs (British political party)}}" | |||
| December 1830 | Radicals (UK)}}" | Henry Hunt | Radical | ||||
| 1832 | Conservative Party (UK)}}" | (Sir) Peter Hesketh-Fleetwood | Conservative | Whigs (British political party)}}" | |||
| 1837 | Whigs (British political party)}}" | Whig | Conservative Party (UK)}}" | Robert Townley Parker | |||
| 1841 | Whigs (British political party)}}" | Sir George Strickland | Whig{{cite book | last=Stooks Smith | |||
| 1847 | Whigs (British political party)}}" | Charles Grenfell | Whig | ||||
| 1852 | Conservative Party (UK)}}" | Robert Townley Parker | Conservative | ||||
| 1857 | Whigs (British political party)}}" | Charles Grenfell | Whig | Conservative Party (UK)}}" | |||
| 1859 | Liberal Party (UK)}}" | Liberal | |||||
| 1862 by-election | Conservative Party (UK)}}" | Sir Thomas Hesketh | Conservative | ||||
| 1865 | Conservative Party (UK)}}" | Hon. Frederick Stanley | Conservative | ||||
| 1868 | Conservative Party (UK)}}" | Edward Hermon | Conservative | ||||
| 1872 by-election | Conservative Party (UK)}}" | (Sir) John Holker | Conservative | ||||
| 1881 by-election | Conservative Party (UK)}}" | William Farrer Ecroyd | Conservative | ||||
| February 1882 by-election | Conservative Party (UK)}}" | Henry Cecil Raikes | Conservative | ||||
| November 1882 by-election | Conservative Party (UK)}}" | (Sir) William Tomlinson | Conservative | ||||
| 1885 | Conservative Party (UK)}}" | Robert William Hanbury | Conservative | ||||
| 1903 by-election | Conservative Party (UK)}}" | John Kerr | Conservative | ||||
| 1906 | Labour Party (UK)}}" | John Thomas Macpherson | Labour | Liberal Party (UK)}}" | |||
| January 1910 | Conservative Party (UK)}}" | Major the Hon. George Stanley | Conservative | Conservative Party (UK)}}" | |||
| 1915 by-election | Conservative Party (UK)}}" | Urban H. Broughton | Conservative | ||||
| 1918 | Labour Party (UK)}}" | Thomas Shaw | Labour | ||||
| 1922 | Liberal Party (UK)}}" | James Hodge | Liberal | ||||
| 1924 | Conservative Party (UK)}}" | Alfred Ravenscroft Kennedy | Conservative | ||||
| 1929 | Liberal Party (UK)}}" | Sir William Jowitt | Liberal | ||||
| 1929 by-election | Labour Party (UK)}}" | Labour | |||||
| 1931 | Conservative Party (UK)}}" | Adrian Moreing | Conservative | Conservative Party (UK)}}" | |||
| 1936 by-election | Conservative Party (UK)}}" | Edward Cobb | Conservative | ||||
| 1940 by-election | Conservative Party (UK)}}" | Randolph Churchill | Conservative | ||||
| 1945 | Labour Party (UK)}}" | John William Sunderland | Labour | Labour Party (UK)}}" | |||
| 1946 by-election | Labour Party (UK)}}" | Edward Shackleton | Labour |
MPs since 1983
| Election | Member | Party | Notes | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Labour Party (UK)}}" | 1983 | Stan Thorne | Labour | |
| Labour Party (UK)}}" | 1987 | Audrey Wise | Labour | |
| Labour Co-operative}}" | 2000 by-election | Sir Mark Hendrick | Labour and Co-operative |
Overview
Representatives have sat in Parliament for Preston for nearly 800 years, the first recorded names being Willielmus fil' Pauli and Adam Russel. Prior to being reformed as "Preston" in 1983, the former Preston North and Preston South seats were amongst the most marginal in the country - in 1979, Conservative Robert Atkins won Preston North by 29 votes.
With the suburban, middle class former Fulwood Urban District area within Ribble Valley (and from 2010 Wyre and Preston North), the southern portion has awarded MPs with much healthier and secure majorities. Almost all of Preston's representatives from 1915 to 1950, and since its recreation as a single constituency in 1983, have been Labour candidates.
Between 1918 and 1949, the two-seat constituency of Preston was formed by the County Borough of Preston and the Urban District of Fulwood. In 1997, Audrey Wise secured a majority of over 18,000. The collapse of the Conservative vote - 10 percentage points down from 1992 - was firmly with the pattern of the Tory fortunes in that year.
The death of Audrey Wise in 2000 triggered a by-election. At that Preston by-election, Mark Hendrick, former Member of the European Parliament (MEP) for the Lancashire Central constituency with Preston at its heart, secured a victory with a 4,400 majority. The surprise of the night was the result of the fledgling Socialist Alliance, for whom Terry Cartright saved his deposit.
Less than a year later, the 2001 general election returned Mark Hendrick with a much healthier 12,200 majority, up against South Ribble councillor Graham O'Hare for the Conservatives and the then local Liberal Democrat leader Bill Chadwick. In real terms, all three main parties lost support from 1997 - Labour down by over 8,000 votes, Conservatives reduced by over 2,200 and Lib Dems 2,300 lower. One notable candidate in 2001 was David Braid, also a candidate in a number of other seats that year, who had been the "Battle for Britain" candidate in the previous year's by-election.
The 2005 general election was notable for the changes in share of the vote of the minor parties. The first ever Respect candidate, local councillor Michael Lavalette, firmly saved his deposit with nearly 7% of the vote. The Liberal Democrats had chosen former Conservative County Councillor William Parkinson, and had their best result since 1997. Fiona Bryce for the Conservatives, remained in second place seeing her share of the vote remain stable despite the United Kingdom Independence Party (UKIP) polling over 1,000 votes. Mark Hendrick secured another term as MP, although his vote total was 3,000 less than 2001 and 12,000 less than Audrey Wise in 1997.
Labour continued to represent Preston at the elections of 2010, 2015, and 2017. Whilst Mark Hendrick secured less than 50% of the votes cast in 2010, the first time this has occurred at a Preston election since 1983, subsequent results had much stronger Labour majorities. Second place went back to the Conservative Party, regaining from the Liberal Democrats who took second place for the first time in 2010.
Elections

Elections in the 2020s
Elections in the 2010s
Elections in the 2000s
Elections in the 1990s
Elections of the 1980s
Elections in the 1940s
For the general election expected to take place in 1939/1940, the following candidates had been selected;
- Conservative: Adrian Moreing, Edward Cobb
- Labour: P.C. Hoffman, John William Sunderland
Elections in the 1930s
Elections in the 1920s
|reg. electors = 57,953
Elections in the 1910s
- For all General Elections from 1906 to 1929 the Liberal and Labour parties ran only one candidate each, and these candidates ran in harness.

|reg. electors = 57,795
General Election 1914/15:
Another General Election was required to take place before the end of 1915. The political parties had been making preparations for an election to take place and by the July 1914, the following candidates had been selected;
- Unionist: George Stanley and Alfred Tobin
- Labour: Tom Shaw
- Liberal: Frederick Llewellyn-Jones

|reg. electors = 19,521
|reg. electors = 19,521 Cox was replaced as Liberal candidate by Gorst - due to his frequent criticism of Liberal social policy - but chose to run independently.
Elections in the 1900s

|reg. electors = 18,626
|reg. electors = 17,973

|reg. electors = 16,867
Elections in the 1890s

|reg. electors = 16,395
|reg. electors = 15,959
Elections in the 1880s
|reg. electors = 14,876

|reg. electors = 14,876
|reg. electors = 12,978
- Caused by Raikes' resignation to seek election in the 1882 Cambridge University by-election.
|reg. electors = 12,978
- Caused by Holker's resignation upon appointment as a Lord Justice of Appeal.
|reg. electors = 11,748
- Caused by Hermon's death.
|reg. electors = 12,108
Elections in the 1870s
- Caused by Holker's appointment as Solicitor General for England and Wales.
|reg. electors = 12,073
|reg. electors = 10,214
- Caused by Hesketh's death.
Elections in the 1860s
|reg. electors = 10,763
|reg. electors = 2,562
|reg. electors = 2,773
- Caused by Cross' resignation.
Elections in the 1850s
|reg. electors = 2,657
|reg. electors = 2,793
|reg. electors = 2,854
Elections in the 1840s
|reg. electors = 3,044
|reg. electors = 3,371
Elections in the 1830s
|reg. electors = 3,656
|reg. electors = 3,734
|reg. electors = 6,352
- Caused by Smith-Stanley's appointment as Chief Secretary for Ireland
Elections in the 1810s
Notes
References
Sources
- Robert Beatson, A Chronological Register of Both Houses of Parliament (London: Longman, Hurst, Res & Orme, 1807) https://books.google.com/books?id=Gh2wKY2rkDUC&q=Return+of+Members+of+Parliament
- D Brunton & D H Pennington, Members of the Long Parliament (London: George Allen & Unwin, 1954)
- Cobbett's Parliamentary history of England, from the Norman Conquest in 1066 to the year 1803 (London: Thomas Hansard, 1808) https://web.archive.org/web/20150904125310/http://www2.odl.ox.ac.uk/gsdl/cgi-bin/library?e=p-000-00---0modhis06--00-0-0-0prompt-10---4------0-1l--1-en-50---20-about---00001-001-1-1isoZz-8859Zz-1-0&a=d&cl=CL1
- The Constitutional Year Book for 1913 (London: National Union of Conservative and Unionist Associations, 1913)
- F W S Craig, British Parliamentary Election Results 1832-1885 (2nd edition, Aldershot: Parliamentary Research Services, 1989)
- F W S Craig, British Parliamentary Election Results 1918-1949 (Glasgow: Political Reference Publications, 1969)
- Maija Jansson (ed.), Proceedings in Parliament, 1614 (House of Commons) (Philadelphia: American Philosophical Society, 1988)
- J E Neale, The Elizabethan House of Commons (London: Jonathan Cape, 1949)
- J Holladay Philbin, Parliamentary Representation 1832 - England and Wales (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1965)
- Henry Stooks Smith, The Parliaments of England from 1715 to 1847 (2nd edition, edited by FWS Craig - Chichester: Parliamentary Reference Publications, 1973)
References
- (1832). "The statutes of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland. 2 & 3 William IV. Cap. LXIV: An Act to settle and describe the Divisions of Counties, and the Limits of Cities and Boroughs, in England and Wales, in so far as respects the Election of Members to serve in Parliament.". His Majesty's statute and law printers.
- (1868). "A Collection of the Public General Statutes: 1867/68. Cap. XLVI. An Act to settle and describe the Limits of certain Boroughs and the Divisions of certain Counties in England and Wales, in so far as respects the Election of Members to serve in Parliament.". Eyre and Spottiswoode.
- . (1885). ["The Public General Acts of the United Kingdom passed in the forty-eighth and forty-ninth years of the reign of Queen Victoria"](https://archive.org/details/publicgeneralac01walegoog). *Eyre and Spottiswoode*.
- [https://archive.org/stream/representationof00frasrich#page/448/mode/2up RotPA 1918] Archive.org
- "Boundary Commission for England, fifth periodic review, p195".
- "History of Parliament".
- "History of Parliament".
- {{Rayment-hc. p. 2. (March 2012)
- Chicheley was also elected for [[Cambridge (UK Parliament constituency). Cambridge]], which he chose to represent, and never sat for Preston
- On petition, Leicester and Standish were adjudged not to have been duly elected and their opponents, Burgoyne and Hoghton, were declared to have been duly elected in their place
- Major-General from 1772, Lieutenant-General from 1777
- (1838). "The Assembled Commons or Parliamentary Biographer: 1838".
- (1838). "The Parliamentary Guide: a concise history of the Members of both Houses, etc".
- (2009). "STRICKLAND, George (1782–1874), of Hildenley and Boyton, Yorks. and Parliament Street, Mdx.".
- (1962). "The Factory Movement, 1830-1855". [[Palgrave Macmillan]].
- (5 July 1841). "Seats Gained by the Whigs". [[Bell's Weekly Messenger]].
- (15 September 1955). "Politics in Famine-Stricken Preston: An Examination of Liberal Party Management, 1861–65".
- (1996). "English Historical Documents 1783–1832". [[Routledge]].
- (2006). "Economic Thought Before Adam Smith: An Austrian Perspective on the History of Economic Thought, Volume I". Edward Elgar Publishing.
- Later adopted the surname Fermor-Hesketh
- Created a baronet, 1902
- "Parliamentary (General) election results - 4 July 2024". Preston City Council.
- "Statement of persons nominated 2019".
- [http://www.preston.gov.uk/thecouncil/elections-and-voting/general-election/ General Election] Preston City Council
- "Election Data 2015". [[Electoral Calculus]].
- "Preston". [[BBC News Online]].
- "Election Data 2010". [[Electoral Calculus]].
- "Election Data 2005". [[Electoral Calculus]].
- "Election Data 2001". [[Electoral Calculus]].
- Boothroyd, David. "Results of Byelections in the 1997-2002 Parliament".
- "Election Data 1997". [[Electoral Calculus]].
- "Election Data 1992". [[Electoral Calculus]].
- (9 April 1992). "UK General Election results April 1992". Politics Resources.
- "Election Data 1987". [[Electoral Calculus]].
- "Election Data 1983". [[Electoral Calculus]].
- (1974). "British Parliamentary Election Results: 1885-1918". Macmillan Press.
- British Parliamentary Election Results 1885-1918, FWS Craig
- Debrett's House of Commons & Judicial Bench, 1916
- The Liberal Year Book, 1907
- Debrett's House of Commons & Judicial Bench, 1901
- Debrett's House of Commons & Judicial Bench, 1886
- (28 January 1882). "Preston Election- A Liberal Candidate". [[Evening Telegraph (Dundee).
- (12 May 1881). "Preston Liberals". [[Western Daily Press]].
- (1977). "British Parliamentary Election Results 1832-1885". Macmillan Press.
- (29 May 1880). "George William Bahr". [[The Illustrated London News]].
- (30 August 1872). "The Representation of Preston". [[Manchester Evening News]].
- (23 April 1859). "Mr. Clifton's Candidature". Preston Chronicle.
- (10 July 1852). "The Elections". Preston Chronicle.
- (15 December 1832). "The Election". Preston Chronicle.
- "Preston".
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