28th New Brunswick Legislature
The 28th New Brunswick Legislative Assembly represented New Brunswick between March 9, 1893, and September 1895.
Samuel Leonard Tilley served as Lieutenant-Governor of New Brunswick until September 1893, when he was replaced by John Boyd. John James Fraser became lieutenant-governor after Boyd's death in December of that year.
John Percival Burchill was chosen as speaker.
The Liberal Party led by Andrew G. Blair formed the government. However, Blair was defeated in his own riding and was forced to run in a by-election in Queen's.
The province's Legislative Council was abolished in 1892.
History
Members
Electoral District | Name |
---|---|
Saint John County | Albert T. Dunn |
Harrison A. McKeown | |
York | William K. Allen |
William T. Howe | |
James K. Pinder | |
Herman H. Pitts | |
Westmorland | ? Smith |
W. Woodbury Wells | |
Henry A. Powell | |
Amasa E. Killam | |
Kings | Albert S. White |
George G. Scovil | |
Gabriel Flewelling | |
Queens | Thomas Hetherington[1] Andrew G. Blair (1892) |
Laughlin P. Farris | |
Charlotte | James Mitchell |
George F. Hill | |
James O'Brien | |
James Russell | |
Northumberland | L.J. Tweedie |
John O'Brien | |
John P. Burchill | |
James Robinson | |
Sunbury | William E. Perley |
Charles B. Harrison | |
Kent | James D. Phinney |
Jean-Baptiste Goguen | |
Gloucester | Patrick G. Ryan |
Joseph Poirier | |
Carleton | Henry A. Connell Marcus C. Atkinson (1895) |
J.T. Allan Dibblee | |
Restigouche | William Murray |
Charles H. LaBillois | |
Albert | H.R. Emmerson |
W.J. Lewis | |
Victoria | George Thomas Baird |
Madawaska | Lévite Thériault |
Saint John City | Alfred Augustus Stockton |
Silas Alward | |
A.C. Smith | |
William Shaw |
Notes
- ^ resigned
References
- Results of the provincial elections in New Brunswick, New York Times, October 24, 1892
- The Canadian parliamentary companion, 1897, JA Gemmill
Preceded by | Legislative Assemblies of New Brunswick 1892–1895 | Succeeded by |
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- Roger Melanson
- Former Opposition leaders
- Bill Oliver
- Former speakers
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