Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective
Haltemprice (UK Parliament constituency)
Parliamentary constituency in the United Kingdom, 1950–1983 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Remove ads
Haltemprice (which from 1950 to 1955 was officially known as Kingston upon Hull, Haltemprice) was a constituency in the East Riding of Yorkshire, a traditional sub-division of the historic county of Yorkshire. It returned one Member of Parliament (MP) to the House of Commons of the Parliament of the United Kingdom. It was created for the 1950 general election, and abolished for the 1983 general election.
Remove ads
Boundaries
1950–1955: The Urban District of Haltemprice, and the County Borough of Kingston-upon-Hull wards of Pickering and St Andrew's.
1955–1983: The Municipal Borough of Beverley, the Urban District of Haltemprice, and the Rural District of Beverley. The two Kingston-upon-Hull wards were transferred to the Hull West constituency.
In the 1983 redistribution, which reflected the major local government boundary changes of 1974, this constituency disappeared. Most of it became the new seat of Beverley, while the remainder of the constituency contributed 11.6% of the new Boothferry seat.
Remove ads
Members of Parliament
Election results
Elections in the 1950s
Elections in the 1960s
Elections in the 1970s
Remove ads
In popular culture
Haltemprice was the constituency of the fictional ultra-right Tory MP, Alan B'Stard, in The New Statesman, a TV series which began after the actual constituency was abolished in 1983. In the first episode of the show, B'Stard wins the election in a landslide, after cutting the brake lines on his Labour and SDP opponents' cars, nearly killing them. To add insult to (literal) injury, both of these opponents finish behind Screaming Lord Sutch of the Monster Raving Loony Party, which gets more votes then Labour or SDP combined.
Remove ads
References
Sources
Wikiwand - on
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Remove ads