39th General Assembly of Prince Edward Island
The 39th General Assembly of Prince Edward Island was in session from April 6, 1920 to June 23, 1923. The Liberal Party led by John Howatt Bell formed the government.
C. Gavin Duffy was elected speaker.
There were four sessions of the 39th General Assembly:
Session | Start | End |
---|---|---|
1st | April 6, 1920 | May 1, 1920 |
2nd | March 10, 1921 | April 27, 1921 |
3rd | March 14, 1922 | May 3, 1922 |
4th | March 20, 1923 | May 2, 1923 |
Members
Kings
District | Assemblyman | Party | Councillor | Party | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1st Kings | Daniel C. MacDonald | Liberal | Harry D. McLean | Conservative | ||
2nd Kings | Robert Cox | Liberal | James P. McIntyre | Liberal | ||
3rd Kings | John A. Dewar[1] | Conservative | James J. Johnston | Liberal | ||
4th Kings | Wallace B. Butler | Liberal | William G. Sutherland[2] Mark Bonnell (1922) |
Liberal | ||
5th Kings | Stephen Hessian | Liberal | James David Stewart | Conservative |
Prince
District | Assemblyman | Party | Councillor | Party | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1st Prince | Benjamin Gallant[3] Jeremiah Blanchard (1922) |
Liberal | Christopher Metherall | Liberal | ||
2nd Prince | Albert Charles Saunders | Liberal | William H. Dennis | Liberal | ||
3rd Prince | Aubin Edmond Arsenault[4] Adrien Arsenault (1922) |
Conservative | Alfred E. MacLean[5] Thomas MacNutt (1922) |
Liberal | ||
4th Prince | John Howatt Bell | Liberal | |
Walter Lea | Liberal | |
5th Prince | James A. MacNeill[6] John F. MacNeill (1922) |
Conservative Independent |
Creelman McArthur | Liberal |
Queens
District | Assemblyman | Party | Councillor | Party | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1st Queens | Murdock Kennedy | Conservative | Cyrus Crosby | Liberal | ||
2nd Queens | Bradford W. LePage | Liberal | George E. Hughes | Liberal | ||
3rd Queens | Peter Brodie | Liberal | David McDonald | Liberal | ||
4th Queens | James C. Irving | Liberal | Frederick J. Nash | Liberal | ||
5th Queens | Edmund Higgs | Liberal | Gavan Duffy | Liberal |
Notes:
- ↑ Dewar won election and sat as an "Independent Farmer", from "John Alexander Dewar". Prince Edward Island Legislative Documents Online.
- ↑ died
- ↑ died in 1921
- ↑ named judge
- ↑ elected to House of Commons
- ↑ ran for federal seat
References
- Election results for the Prince Edward Island Legislative Assembly, 1919-07-24
- O'Handley, Kathryn Canadian Parliamentary Guide, 1994 ISBN 0-921925-54-9
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