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1861 Newfoundland general election

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1861 Newfoundland general election
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The 1861 Newfoundland general election was held on May 2, 1861 to elect the members of the 8th General Assembly of Newfoundland in the Newfoundland Colony. It was triggered following the forced resignation of Premier John Kent by Governor Alexander Bannerman after Kent accused Bannerman of colluding with the Conservative Party. Bannerman had appointed Conservative leader Hugh Hoyles as the new Premier, but Kent quickly passed a motion of non-confidence against Hoyles' administration, forcing Bannerman to call an election.

Quick facts 30 seats of the Newfoundland House of Assembly 16 seats needed for a majority, First party ...

The election was fraught with sectarian tensions. Most districts went uncontested for fear of violence. Riots prevented an election from occurring in the district of Harbour Grace. A violent confrontation broke out in Salmon Cove within the Harbour Main district, killing one man and injuring nine others, and the returns for that district were subsequently invalidated by the House of Assembly. A political deadlock ensued, and no party controlled the legislature until a by-election held in Harbour Grace in November 1861 finally gave Hoyles' Conservatives a majority government. Ambrose Shea subsequently became the leader of the Liberal Party.

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Results

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Results by district

  • Names in boldface type represent party leaders.
  • † indicates that the incumbent did not run again.
  • ‡ indicates that the incumbent ran in a different district.
  • $ indicates that the incumbent was initially nominated for re-election, but they later chose to withdraw from the race.

St. John's

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Conception Bay

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Avalon Peninsula

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Eastern and Central Newfoundland

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Southern Newfoundland

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Notes

  1. Not the incumbent, but stood in this district and won.
  2. This figure includes the subsequent by-election for Harbour Grace as that district did not initially submit returns due to sectarian violence.
  3. The entirety of the Conservative caucus were elected by acclamation. As a consequence of this, the only votes that the government received in this election were through an unsuccessful candidate in the district of Ferryland.
  4. If the 1,273 votes cast for the four Liberal candidates in Harbour Main are counted, then the opposition under Kent received a total of 6,457 votes.
  5. Including the invalidated results from the district of Harbour Main, a total of 6,876 votes were cast in this election.
  6. Kenneth McLea initially ran as a Conservative candidate, but he withdrew prior to election day following mob violence against his business premises.
  7. W. P. Taylor initially ran as a Conservative candidate, but he withdrew prior to election day following mob violence against some of his relatives.[1]
  8. Although Moore would withdraw prior to election day, no return was declared by the returning officer, and the House of Assembly later also determined that nobody had been elected in the district of Harbour Grace. A by-election was held in November 1861 which saw Hayward and Moore elected, both of whom were running as Conservatives.
  9. Henry Moore initially ran as a Conservative candidate, but he withdrew prior to election day following a series of riots in Harbour Grace where property belonging to his and Hayward's supporters were damaged by a group of 400 Roman Catholics from Carbonear.
  10. Following the violence in Salmon Cove, the 36 voters from Cat's Cove illegally cast their ballots for Furey and Hogsett in Harbour Main. Under pressure from Furey and Hogsett's outraged voters, the returning officer, Patrick Strapp, issued a return declaring them to have been elected, but it was declared invalid by the House of Assembly. After further violence in St. John's, a select committee decreed that Nowlan and Byrne had been elected. The results of the election without the illegal votes in Harbour Main are shown here in italics.
  11. Furey and Hogsett had been endorsed by the Roman Catholic clergy of Harbour Main as well as by John Dalton, the Catholic Bishop of Harbour Grace. Byrne and Nowlan ran on a separate ticket without the support of the aforementioned clergy.
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References

Further reading

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