Carlow County (UK Parliament constituency)
Boundaries and Boundary changes
This constituency comprised the whole of County Carlow, except for Carlow Borough 1801-1885.
It returned two MPs 1801-1885, but only one from 1885 to 1922. This was the only Irish county not divided for Parliamentary purposes in the redistribution of 1885. It was thus the only Irish county constituency to exist at every general election from the union with Great Britain to the partition of Ireland.
The constituency ceased to be entitled to be represented in the UK House of Commons on the dissolution of 26 October 1922, shortly before the Irish Free State came into legal existence on 6 December 1922.
Politics
In the 1918 election the Sinn Féin candidate was unopposed.
Dáil Éireann 1918-1922
The constituency was, in Irish republican theory, entitled to return one Teachta Dála (known in English as a Deputy) in 1918 to serve in the Irish Republic's First Dáil. Sinn Féin used the UK general election in 1918 to elect the Dáil. The revolutionary body assembled on 21 January 1919. The list of members read out on that day included everyone elected in Ireland. Only the Sinn Féin Deputies participated in the Dáil, but the other Irish MPs could have done so if they had chosen to adhere to the Republic.
The First Dáil, passed a motion at its last meeting on 10 May 1921, the first three parts of which make explicit the republican view.
1. That the Parliamentary elections which are to take place during the present month be regarded as elections to Dáil Éireann.
2. That all deputies duly returned at these elections be regarded as members of Dáil Éireann and allowed to take their seats on subscribing to the proposed Oath of Allegiance.
3. That the present Dáil dissolve automatically as soon as the new body has been summoned by the President and called to order.
The Second Dáil first met on 16 August 1921, thereby dissolving the First Dáil.
Sinn Féin had decided to use the polls for the Northern Ireland House of Commons and the House of Commons of Southern Ireland as an election for the Irish Republic's Second Dáil. No actual voting was necessary in Southern Ireland as all the seats were filled by unopposed returns. Except for Dublin University all other constituencies elected Sinn Féin TDs. As with the First Dáil, the other Deputies could have joined the Dáil if they chose.
From the Third Dáil onwards the Dáil represented only the twenty-six counties which formed the Irish Free State.
In the 2nd and 3rd Dála Carlow formed part of the Carlow-Kilkenny constituency.
This constituency comprised the whole of County Carlow, except for Carlow Borough 1801-1885.
It returned two MPs 1801-1885, but only one from 1885 to 1922. This was the only Irish county not divided for Parliamentary purposes in the redistribution of 1885. It was thus the only Irish county constituency to exist at every general election from the union with Great Britain to the partition of Ireland.
The constituency ceased to be entitled to be represented in the UK House of Commons on the dissolution of 26 October 1922, shortly before the Irish Free State came into legal existence on 6 December 1922.
- Members of Parliament
- MPs 1801-1885
Election | 1st Member | 1st Party | 2nd Member | 2nd Party |
1801 | William Henry Burton | Sir Richard Butler | ||
Jul. 1802 | David Latouche | Walter Bagenal | ||
Oct. 1812 |
0 |
Henry Bruen | ||
18 Apr 1816 | Robert Anthony Latouche | 0 | ||
Jun 1818 | Sir Ulysses Bagenal Burgh | 0 | ||
Jun 1826 | Thomas Kavanagh | 0 | ||
May 1831 | Walter Blackney | Sir John Milley Doyle | ||
Dec 1832 |
0 |
Thomas Wallace | ||
Jan. 1835 | Henry Bruen | Thomas Kavanagh | ||
15 Jun 1835 | Nicholas Aylward Vigors | Alexander Raphael | ||
19 Aug 1835 | Henry Bruen | Thomas Kavanagh | ||
18 Feb 1837 |
0 |
Nicholas Aylward Vigors | ||
Aug 1837 | John Ashton Yates | 0 | ||
5 Dec 1840 |
0 |
Henry Bruen | ||
Jul 1841 | Thomas Bunbury | 0 | ||
1 Jul 1846 | William Bunbury McClintock-Bunbury | 0 | ||
Jul 1852 | John Ball | 0 | ||
25 Apr 1853 |
0 |
William Bunbury McClintock-Bunbury | ||
Apr 1857 | Henry Bruen | 0 | ||
7 Aug 1862 |
0 |
Denis William Pack Beresford | ||
Nov 1868 |
0 |
Arthur MacMurrough Kavanagh | ||
Apr 1880 | Edmund Dwyer Gray | Donald Horne McFarlane | ||
1885 | representation reduced to one member | |||
MPs 1885-1922
From | To | Name | Party | Died |
---|---|---|---|---|
1885 | 1886 | Edmund Dwyer Gray | Nationalist | 27 March 1888 |
1886 | 1887 | John Aloysius Blake | Nationalist | 22 May 1887 |
1887 | 1891 | Charles James Patrick O'Gorman Mahon | Nationalist | 15 June 1891 |
1891 | 1892 | John Hammond | Nationalist | 17 November 1907 |
1892 | 1900 | Anti-Parnellite | ||
1900 | 1908 | Nationalist | ||
1908 | 1910 | Walter MacMurrough Kavanagh | Nationalist | 18 July 1922 |
1910 | 1918 | Michael Molloy | Nationalist | |
1918 | 1921 | James Lennon | Sinn Féin |
13 August 1958 |
This list is incomplete.Elections
In 1918 the constituency used the first past the post system. No poll was necessary as only one candidate was nominated. In 1918 the electorate included all men, who were qualified to vote, if they had attained the age of 21. Female electors had to be at least 30 and meet property qualifications to acquire the franchise.
- 1918 general election (1 seat); polling 14 December, result declared 28 December
- 16,133 electors
- James Lennon (SF): Unopposed
This list is incomplete.
References
- The Parliaments of England by Henry Stooks Smith (1st edition published in three volumes 1844-50), 2nd edition edited (in one volume) by F.W.S. Craig (Political Reference Publications 1973)
- Parliamentary Election Results in Ireland, 1801-1922, edited by B.M. Walker (Royal Irish Academy 1978)