33rd General Assembly of Prince Edward Island

The 33rd General Assembly of Prince Edward Island was in session from April 5, 1898 to November 12, 1900. The Liberal Party led by Alexander Bannerman Warburton formed the government. In August 1898, Donald Farquharson became Liberal party leader and Premier.

There were three sessions of the 33rd General Assembly:

Session Start End
1st April 5, 1898 May 14, 1898
2nd April 17, 1899 May 19, 1899
3rd May 28, 1900 June 19, 1900

James H. Cummiskey was elected speaker.

Members

Kings

District Assemblyman Party Councillor Party
1st Kings     James R. McLean Liberal     John Kickham Conservative
2nd Kings     Arthur Peters Liberal     Anthony McLaughlin Liberal
3rd Kings     Cyrus Shaw Conservative     James E. MacDonald Conservative
4th Kings     Donald A. MacKinnon[1]

Albert P. Prowse (1899)

Conservative     Murdock MacKinnon Liberal
5th Kings     Archibald J. MacDonald Conservative     Daniel Gordon Conservative

Prince

District Assemblyman Party Councillor Party
1st Prince     Edward Hackett[2]

Meddie Gallant (1898)[3]
Henry Pineau (1899)

Conservative     James Birch Liberal
2nd Prince     James W. Richards Liberal     Alfred McWilliams Liberal
3rd Prince     Joseph F. Arsenault Conservative     John A. MacDonald Conservative
4th Prince     John H. Bell [4]

Samuel E. Reid (1899)

Liberal    
Peter MacNutt Liberal
5th Prince     Alfred A. LeFurgey [2]

Gilbert DesRoches (1899)

Liberal

Independent

    Angus McMillan Liberal

Queens

District Assemblyman Party Councillor Party
1st Queens     Alexander Bannerman Warburton [5]

William Campbell (1898)

Liberal

Independent

    Peter Sinclair Liberal
2nd Queens     Joseph Wise [6]

Albert E. Douglas (1900)

Liberal     Donald Farquharson Liberal
3rd Queens     Frederick Peters Liberal     James H. Cummiskey Liberal
4th Queens     Hector C. McDonald [5]

Angus A. MacLean (1899)

Liberal

Independent

    George Forbes Liberal
5th Queens     Lemuel E. Prowse Liberal     Benjamin Rogers Liberal

Notes:

  1. named to Executive Council
  2. 1 2 resigned to run for federal seat
  3. election declared void in 1899
  4. elected to federal seat
  5. 1 2 appointed judge
  6. resigned

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Tuesday, October 13, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.