Misplaced Pages

1879 Donegal by-election

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.

The 1879 Donegal by-election was fought on 15 December 1879. The by-election, to one of two seats in the UK House of Commons constituency of Donegal, arose due to the death of the incumbent Conservative MP, William Wilson.

Early reports suggested that the Conservative candidate would be Lord Mountcharles, son of the Marquess of Conyngham, who owned an estate in the county, and was said to be personally popular as his tenants enjoyed 'the largest measure of tenant-right'. A Mr McDavitt, a lawyer, was reported as the likely Liberal candidate, supporting Home Rule. Mountcharles issued an election address, promising to support improvements to the Land Act and 'extension of the principle of local government'. However he shortly after withdrew from the contest. The candidate nominated for the Conservatives was David Brown McCorkell, a barrister from Derry; Thomas Lea, a manufacturer from Kidderminster in England, was nominated as the Liberal candidate . Lea, formerly MP for Kidderminster, had failed to win the Donegal seat in the previous by-election by less than 100 votes. Although this had for long been a Conservative seat, following the withdrawal of Lord Mountcharles there was an expectation that Lea would win. When the votes were counted, he had 2,313 votes as against 1,630 for McCorkell, a Liberal gain with a majority of 683.

References

  1. "Election Intelligence." Times 13 Nov. 1879
  2. "Election Intelligence." Times 14 Nov. 1879
  3. "Election Intelligence." Times 18 Nov. 1879; "Election Intelligence." Times 22 Nov. 1879
  4. "Election Intelligence." Times 9 Dec. 1879
  5. "Election Intelligence." Times 17 Dec. 1879
« 20th Parliament « By-elections to the 21st Parliament of the United Kingdom » 22nd Parliament »
1874
1875
1876
1877
1878
1879
1880
Lists of UK by-elections
1801–1806
1806–1818
1818–1832
1832–1847
1847–1857
1857–1868
1868–1885
1885–1900
1900–1918
1918–1931
1931–1950
1950–1979
1979–2010
2010–present
Northern Ireland
Hereditary peers
Categories: