1900 British Columbia general election explained

The 1900 British Columbia general election was held in 1900. It was held to elect members of the Legislative Assembly of British Columbia. The election was called on April 24, 1900, and held on June 9, 1900. The new legislature met for the first time on July 19, 1900.

Like in the previous BC general election, of the 38 MLAs 24 were elected in single member districts in 1900. There were also three 2-member districts and two 4-member districts. Each voter could cast as many votes as there were seats to fill in the district.[1]

This was the last election in which political parties were not part of the official process in British Columbia, although because of the political chaos in this year resulting from the joint misrule of Premier Joseph Martin and the Lieutenant-Governor, Thomas Robert McInnes, many individual candidates declared their party affiliations in many ridings as a protest against the non-party system.

For more on the political circumstances of this election, please see 1898 British Columbia general election.

Results by riding

|-||    |align="center"|Edwin Clarke Smith|align="center" |East Kootenay (south riding)
Government
||    ||    |align="center" rowspan=2|Cassiar
Conservative Opposition
Independent Opposition
|align="center"|Charles William Digby Clifford||    |-||    |align="center"|John Oliver|align="center" |Westminster-Delta
Government
||    ||    |align="center"|James Stables||    |-||    |align="center"|John Cunningham Brown|align="center" |New Westminster City
Government
||    ||    |align="center" |Alberni
Progressive
|align="center"|Alan Webster Neill||    |-||    |align="center"|Hugh Bowie Gilmour|align="center" rowspan=2 |Vancouver City
Government
||    ||    |align="center" rowspan=2|Cariboo
Opposition
|align="center"|Joseph Hunter||    |-||    |align="center"|Joseph Martin1||    ||    |align="center"|Samuel Augustus Rogers ||    |-||    |align="center"|Smith Curtis|align="center" |West Kootenay-Rossland
Government
||    ||    |align="center" |Comox
Opposition
|align="center"|Lewis Alfred Mounce||    |-||||||    |align="center" rowspan=2 |Esquimalt
Independent Opposition
Opposition
|align="center"|William Henry Hayward ||    |-||||||    |align="center"|Charles Edward Pooley||    |-||||||    |align="center" |Cowichan
Independent Conservative
|align="center"|Charles Herbert Dickie||    |-||||||    |align="center" |Lillooet East
Opposition Progressive
|align="center"|James Douglas Prentice||    |-||||||    |align="center" |East Kootenay (north riding)
Independent Progressive
|align="center"|Wilmer Cleveland Wells||    |-||||||    |align="center" |Nanaimo City
Labour
|align="center"|Ralph Smith||    |-||||||    |align="center" |South Nanaimo
Opposition
|align="center"|James Dunsmuir2||    |-||||||    |align="center" |Lillooet West
Independent Opposition
|align="center"|Alfred Wellington Smith||    |-||||||    |align="center" rowspan=2 |Vancouver City
Conservative
|align="center"|James Ford Garden||    |-||||||    |align="center"|Robert Garnett Tatlow||    |-||||||    |align="center" |North Nanaimo
Independent
|align="center"|William Wallace Burns McInnes||    |-||||||    |align="center" |North Victoria
Independent Liberal
|align="center"|John Paton Booth||    |-||||||    |align="center" |South Victoria
Opposition
|align="center"|David McEwen Eberts||    |-||||||    |align="center" |West Kootenay-Nelson
Opposition
|align="center"|John Frederick Hume||    |-||||||    |align="center" rowspan=4 |Victoria City
Opposition
|align="center"|Richard Hall||    |-||||||    |align="center"|Henry Dallas Helmcken||    |-||||||    |align="center"|Albert Edward McPhillips||    |-||||||    |align="center"|John Herbert Turner||    |-||||||    |align="center" |West Kootenay-Revelstoke
Conservative
|align="center"|Thomas Taylor||    |-||||||    |align="center" |West Kootenay-Slocan
Progressive
|align="center"|Robert Francis Green||    |-||||||    |align="center" |Westminster-Chilliwhack
Progressive
|align="center"|Charles William Munro||    |-||||||    |align="center" |Westminster-Dewdney
Conservative
|align="center"|Richard McBride||    |-||||||    |align="center" |Westminster-Richmond
Conservative
|align="center"|Thomas Kidd||    |-||||||    |align="center" |Yale-East
Opposition
|align="center"|Price Ellison||    |-||||||    |align="center" |Yale-North
Independent Opposition
|align="center"|Frederick John Fulton||    |-||||||    |align="center" |Yale-West
Opposition Progressive
|align="center"|Denis Murphy||    |-||align-left"|1 Incumbent Premier|||||align-left"|2 Premier-Elect|-| align="center" colspan="10"|Source: [2] |-|}

See also

Further reading & references

Notes and References

  1. Electoral History of BC, 1871-1986, p. 545
  2. Web site: https://web.archive.org/web/20041208073729/http://www.elections.bc.ca/elections/electoral_history/9ge1900-1.html . Electoral History of British Columbia 1871-1986 Part One 9th General Election 1900 . dead . elections.bc.ca. December 8, 2004 .