39th General Assembly of Prince Edward Island

The 39th General Assembly of Prince Edward Island was in session from April 6, 1920 to June 23, 1923. The Liberal Party led by John Howatt Bell formed the government.

C. Gavin Duffy was elected speaker.

There were four sessions of the 39th General Assembly:

Session Start End
1st April 6, 1920 May 1, 1920
2nd March 10, 1921 April 27, 1921
3rd March 14, 1922 May 3, 1922
4th March 20, 1923 May 2, 1923

Members

Kings

District Assemblyman Party Councillor Party
1st Kings     Daniel C. MacDonald Liberal     Harry D. McLean Conservative
2nd Kings     Robert Cox Liberal     James P. McIntyre Liberal
3rd Kings     John A. Dewar[1] Conservative     James J. Johnston Liberal
4th Kings     Wallace B. Butler Liberal     William G. Sutherland[2]

Mark Bonnell (1922)

Liberal
5th Kings     Stephen Hessian Liberal     James David Stewart Conservative

Prince

District Assemblyman Party Councillor Party
1st Prince     Benjamin Gallant[3]

Jeremiah Blanchard (1922)

Liberal     Christopher Metherall Liberal
2nd Prince     Albert Charles Saunders Liberal     William H. Dennis Liberal
3rd Prince     Aubin Edmond Arsenault[4]

Adrien Arsenault (1922)

Conservative     Alfred E. MacLean[5]

Thomas MacNutt (1922)

Liberal
4th Prince     John Howatt Bell Liberal    
Walter Lea Liberal
5th Prince     James A. MacNeill[6]

John F. MacNeill (1922)

Conservative

Independent

    Creelman McArthur Liberal

Queens

District Assemblyman Party Councillor Party
1st Queens     Murdock Kennedy Conservative     Cyrus Crosby Liberal
2nd Queens     Bradford W. LePage Liberal     George E. Hughes Liberal
3rd Queens     Peter Brodie Liberal     David McDonald Liberal
4th Queens     James C. Irving Liberal     Frederick J. Nash Liberal
5th Queens     Edmund Higgs Liberal     Gavan Duffy Liberal

Notes:

  1. Dewar won election and sat as an "Independent Farmer", from "John Alexander Dewar". Prince Edward Island Legislative Documents Online.
  2. died
  3. died in 1921
  4. named judge
  5. elected to House of Commons
  6. ran for federal seat

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 7/1/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.