Newington West (UK Parliament constituency)

Newington West
Former Borough constituency
for the House of Commons
18851918
Number of members one
Replaced by Southwark Central
Created from Southwark

Newington West was a parliamentary constituency in the Newington area of South London. It returned one Member of Parliament (MP) to the House of Commons of the Parliament of the United Kingdom, elected by the first past the post system.

History

Newington West in the Metropolitan Board of Works area, showing boundaries used from 1885 to 1918.

The constituency was created by the Redistribution of Seats Act 1885 for the 1885 general election. It was abolished for the 1918 general election, although the new constituency of Southwark Central had very similar boundaries.

Members of Parliament

Election Member[1] Party[2]
1885 Charles Wallwyn Radcliffe Cooke Conservative
1892 Cecil William Norton Liberal
1916 by-election James Daniel Gilbert Liberal
1918 constituency abolished

Election results

Election Political result Candidate Party Votes % ±%
General election 1885 [2]
New seat
Electorate: 6,377
Turnout: 5,014 (78.6%) N/A
Conservative win
Majority: 645 (12.8%) N/A
C. W. Radcliffe CookeConservative2,41948.2N/A
John Seymour Keay Liberal1,77435.4N/A
Sir William McArthur[3] Independent Liberal82116.4N/A
General election 1886 [2]
Electorate: 6,377
Turnout: 4,502 (70.8%) 7.8
Conservative hold
Majority: 382 (8.4%) 4.4
Swing: 2.2% from Con to Lib
C. W. Radcliffe CookeConservative2,44754.2+6.0
Joseph Firth Bottomley Firth Liberal2,06545.8+10.4
General election 1892 [2]
Electorate: 7,579
Turnout: 5,749 (75.9%) +5.1
Liberal gain from Conservative
Majority: 1,093 (19.0%)
Swing: 13.7% from Con to Lib
Cecil NortonLiberal3,42159.5+13.7
George William Tallents Conservative2,23840.513.7
General election 1895 [2]
Electorate: 7,971
Turnout: 5,978 (75.1%) 0.8
Liberal hold
Majority: 450 (7.6%) 11.4
Swing: 5.7% from Lib to Con
Cecil NortonLiberal3,21953.85.7
George William Tallents Conservative2,76946.25.7
General election 1900 [2]
Electorate: 8,491
Turnout: 5,962 (70.2%) 4.9
Liberal hold
Majority: 1,156 (19.4%) +11.8
Swing: 5.9% from Con to Lib
Cecil NortonLiberal3,55959.7+5.9
Francis Ignatius Ricarde-Seaver Conservative2,40340.35.9
General election 1906 [2]
Electorate: 8,995
Turnout: 6,871 (76.4%) +6.2
Liberal hold
Majority: 2,021 (29.4%) +10.0
Swing: 5.0% from Con to Lib
Cecil NortonLiberal4,44664.7+5.0
Ralph Emanuel Belilios[4] Conservative2,42535.35.0
General election January 1910 [2]
Electorate: 9,635
Turnout: 8,288 (86.0%) +9.6
Liberal hold
Majority: 412 (5.0%) 24.4
Swing: 12.2% from Lib to Con
Cecil NortonLiberal4,35052.512.2
Warwick Brookes Conservative3,93847.5+12.2
General election December 1910 [2]
Electorate: 9,635
Turnout: 7,536 (78.2%) 7.8
Liberal hold
Majority: 540 (7.2%) +2.2
Swing: 1.1% from Con to Lib
Cecil NortonLiberal4,03853.6+1.1
Warwick Brookes Conservative3,49846.41.1
By-election January 1916 [2]
Norton elevated to the peerage
Electorate: 9,814
Turnout: 3,433 (35.0%) 43.2
Liberal hold
Majority: 1,859 (54.2%) +47.0
James Daniel GilbertLiberal1,64677.1+23.5
Joseph J. Terrett Independent Labour78722.9N/A

Notes and references

  1. Leigh Rayment's Historical List of MPs – Constituencies beginning with "N" (part 1)
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Craig, F. W. S. (1983) [1969]. British parliamentary election results 1918–1949 (3rd ed.). Chichester: Parliamentary Research Services. p. 37. ISBN 0-900178-06-X.
  3. Sir William McArthur had been MP for Lambeth from 1868 until that constituency was abolished for the 1885 election
  4. Beliliois unsuccessfully contested Newington Walworth at the elections in January 1910 and December 1910
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