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Thomas Scanlan

Irish barrister and nationalist politician (1874–1930)


Irish barrister and nationalist politician (1874–1930)

Thomas Scanlan (21 May 1874 – 9 January 1930) was an Irish barrister and nationalist politician. He was Member of Parliament (MP) for North Sligo from 1909 to 1918, as a member of the Irish Parliamentary Party in the House of Commons of the United Kingdom.

Early life

Son of Thomas Scanlan, a farmer, he was born at Drumcliffe, County Sligo, and educated at Summerhill College in Sligo and at the University of St Andrews, Scotland. In 1905 he married Mary Helen Mullen of Glasgow, daughter of John Mullen.

He began his career as a journalist on the Glasgow Observer. Later he became a solicitor and eventually was called to the English Bar and became prominently identified with the Irish movement in London.

Political career

Scanlan was elected unopposed for North Sligo at a by-election in August 1909 after the death of P. A. McHugh MP. and was unopposed in the January and December 1910 general elections. At one time he served as a secretary of the Irish Parliamentary Party. In 1918 he lost his seat to J. J. Clancy of Sinn Féin, by a margin of more than two to one.

Scanlan introduced the Sligo Corporation Act 1918 to use the single transferable vote (STV) for elections to Sligo Corporation, and to enhance the corporation's power to set rates. STV had been introduced in university constituencies by the Representation of the People Act 1918, and was envisaged for the Home Rule assembly of the Government of Ireland Act 1914 which never came into force. STV's success in Sligo saw it extended to all Ireland for the 1920 local elections.

Notes

Sources

  • Dod's Parliamentary Companion 1912
  • Irish Independent, 10 January 1930
  • Patrick Maume, The Long Gestation: Irish Nationalist Life 1891–1918, New York, St Martin's Press, 1999
  • Cornelius O'Leary, Irish Elections 1918-1977: Parties, Voters and Proportional Representation, Dublin, Gill & MacMillan, 1979
  • {{cite book | editor-first= Brian M. |editor-last=Walker
  • Who Was Who, 1929–1940

References

  1. Walker (1978), p.171
  2. Walker (1978), pp.372–373
  3. Walker (1978), p.190
  4. Maume (1999), p. 128
  5. Maume (1999), pp. 101, 132
  6. Who Was Who says 1925 to 1927, the ''Irish Independent'' 1924 to 1928
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