Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Londonderry City by election, 1914

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The Londonderry City by-election was a Parliamentary by-election. It returned one Member of Parliament to the House of Commons of the United Kingdom, elected by the first past the post voting system.

Contents

Liberal Sir James Brown Dougherty was elected unopposed. Dougherty was the last Liberal MP elected in Ireland.

Vacancy

James Hamilton, Marquis of Hamilton had been elected as a Unionist in the 1910 General Election, facing Nationalist opposition. He then succeeded to the Dukedom of Abercorn, resulting in the Londonderry City by-election, 1913, where the Roman Catholic hierarchy supported the Liberal David Hogg, a 73-year-old local shirt manufacturer and a Protestant. Hogg died in August 1914 and the by-election was called for 30 November.

Candidates

Dougherty was an Presbyterian minister, professor of Logic and English, and civil servant.

Aftermath

Dougherty did not stand in the United Kingdom general election, 1918, when the seat was won by Eoin MacNeill of Sinn Féin in a contested election against Unionist and Nationalist candidates.

References

Londonderry City by-election, 1914 Wikipedia