The General Assembly of Nova Scotia was established by a proclamation of the Governor in Council on May 20, 1758. A writ for the election of the 1st General Assembly of Nova Scotia was issued by May 22, returnable at the convening of the assembly on October 2, 1758. The assembly held two sessions, and was dissolved on August 13, 1759.
Sessions
editDates of specific sessions are under research.
Governor and Council
edit- Governor Charles Lawrence
- Lieutenant Governor vacant?
The members of the Council are currently under research.
House of Assembly
editOfficers
edit- Speaker of the House
- Robert Sanderson -left the province for England in 1759.
- William Nesbitt elected August 1, 1759
- Clerk of the House David Lloyd
Division of seats
editSince counties had not been established by this time, the proclamation called for the election of 4 members from Halifax Township, 2 members from Lunenburg Township, and 16 members from the province at large, for a total of 22 members.
The election was held using Block Voting. Each voter had to cast the maximum number of votes, whether 16, two or four.[1]
Knaut and Kedie (or Kedy) represented Lunenburg Township, but the records do not distinguish the Halifax Township members from the at large members.
Members
edit- Joseph Gerrish
- Robert Sanderson -left the province for England in 1759.
- Henry Newton
- William Foye
- William Nesbitt
- Joseph Rundel
- Jonathan Binney
- Henry Ferguson
- George Suckling
- John Burbidge
- Robert Campbell
- William Pantree
- Joseph Fairbanks
- Philip Hammond
- John Fillis
- Lambert Folkers
- Philip Augustus Knaut (Lunenburg Township)
- William Best
- Alexander Kedie (Lunenburg Township)
- Malachy Salter -took seat Oct. 30, 1758.
- Benjamin Gerrish -might not have served, was out of the province by Nov. 21, 1758.
- John Anderson -might not have served, was out of the province by Nov. 21, 1758.
- Archibald Hinshelwood -by-election Jan. 10, 1759, took seat April 6, 1759, election disputed by Richard Bowers, Hinshelwood quit his seat April 9.
- no record of the by-election for the second vacancy.
Note: Unless otherwise noted, members were elected at the general election, and took their seats at the convening of the assembly. By-elections are special elections held to fill specific vacancies. When a member is noted as having taking their seat on a certain date, but a by-election isn't noted, the member was elected at the general election but arrived late.
References
edit- ^ "Proclamation" (PDF). Nova Scotia Legislature. Province of Nova–Scotia. May 20, 1758.
- Democracy 250 : Celebrating 250 Years of Parliamentary Democracy in Canada
- A Directory of the Members of the Legislative Assembly of Nova Scotia, 1758–1958, Public Archives of Nova Scotia (1958)
- Elliott, Shirley B. (1984). "Appendix A: Assembly Lists". The Legislative Assembly of Nova Scotia, 1758-1983: a biographical directory (PDF). Halifax: Province of Nova Scotia. p. 242. ISBN 0-88871-050-X.