1881 New Zealand general election

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1881 general election

← 1879 8 (Māori) & 9 (general) December 1881 1884 →

All 95 seats in the House of Representatives
Turnout 66.5%
  First party
  Sir John Hall, ca 1880.jpg
Leader John Hall
Party Independent
Leader's seat Selwyn
Last election 95 seats
Seats won 95
Seat change Steady
Popular vote N/A
Percentage N/A
Swing N/A

Prime Minister before election

John Hall
Independent

Prime Minister-designate

John Hall
Independent

The New Zealand general election of 1881 was held on 8 and 9 December in the Māori and European electorates, respectively, to elect 95 MPs to the 8th session of the New Zealand Parliament.

1881 was the first time a general election was held under universal male suffrage; all MPs were elected in single-member electorates; and the country quota was introduced, allowing rural electorates to have 25% fewer voters than urban electorates. Beginning with the 1881 election, all elections in European electorates were to be held on the same day, a measure not introduced for Māori electorates until 1951.[1]

1881 electoral redistribution

The previous electoral redistribution was undertaken in 1875 for the 1875–76 election. In the six years since, New Zealand's European population had increased by 65%. In the 1881 electoral redistribution, the House of Representatives increased the number of European representatives to 91 (up from 84 since the 1875–76 election). The number of Māori electorates was held at four. The House further decided that electorates should not have more than one representative, which led to 35 new electorates being formed: Ashburton, Auckland North, Awarua, Christchurch North, Christchurch South, Coromandel, Dunedin Central, Dunedin East, Dunedin South, Dunedin West, Foxton, Franklin North, Franklin South, Hawke's Bay, Hokonui, Inangahua, Kumara, Lincoln, Manukau, Moeraki, Peninsula, St Albans, Stanmore, Sydenham, Taranaki, Tauranga, Te Aro, Thorndon, Waimate, Waipawa, Wairarapa North, Wairarapa South, Waitotara, Wakanui, and Wellington South. In addition, two electorates that had previously been abolished were recreated: Bay of Islands and Oamaru.[2]

These changes necessitated a major disruption to existing boundaries. Only six electorates remained unchanged: Waikato, Waipa, Bruce, Lyttelton, Nelson, and Picton.[2]

The electoral distribution was the first that formally acknowledged the existence of a country quota, where country electorates contained 25% fewer voters than town electorates.[3]

The election

The 1881 election was held on Thursday, 8 December, in the Māori electorates and on Friday, 9 December, in the European electorates to elect a total of 95 MPs to the 8th Parliament. A total number of 120,972 (66.5%) voters turned out to vote.[4] In 11 seats there was only one candidate.[5] 36 and 55 seats were in the North Island and South Island, respectively, plus the 4 Māori electorates.[6]

Results

The following table shows the successful candidate for each electorate.[7]

Member Electorate MP's term
William Montgomery Akaroa Fourth
Edward George Wright Ashburton Second
William Fisher Pearson Ashley First
George Grey Auckland East Fourth
Thomas Peacock Auckland North First
Joseph Dargaville Auckland West First
William Rolleston Avon Fifth
James Parker Joyce Awarua Second
Richard Hobbs Bay of Islands Second
James Rutherford Bruce First
John Munro Buller First
William Barron Caversham Second
Hugh McIlraith Cheviot First
Henry Thomson Christchurch North First
John Holmes Christchurch South First
James William Thomson Clutha Fourth
David McMillan Coleridge First
Alfred Cadman Coromandel First
Thomas Bracken Dunedin Central First
Matthew Green Dunedin East First
Henry Fish Dunedin South First
Thomas Dick Dunedin West Fourth
Vincent Pyke Dunstan Fourth
Allan McDonald East Coast Second
Joseph Tole Eden Third
Harry Atkinson Egmont Sixth
James Wilson Foxton First
Benjamin Harris Franklin North Second
Ebenezer Hamlin Franklin South Third
William Postlethwaite Geraldine First
James Sutter Gladstone First
Joseph Petrie Greymouth First
Fred Sutton Hawkes Bay Third
Henry Wynn-Williams Heathcote First
Gerard George Fitzgerald Hokitika First
Henry Driver Hokonui Fifth
Thomas Mason Hutt Second
Thomas S. Weston Inangahua Second
Henry Feldwick Invercargill Second
Isaac Wilson Kaiapoi First
Richard Seddon Kumara Second
Arthur O'Callaghan Lincoln First
Harry Allwright Lyttelton Second
Walter Woods Johnston Manawatu Fourth
Maurice O'Rorke Manukau Sixth
Edwin Mitchelson Marsden First
Francis Wallace Mackenzie Mataura First
John McKenzie Moeraki First
Richmond Hursthouse Motueka Third
Cecil de Lautour Mount Ida Third
John Buchanan Napier First
Henry Levestam Nelson Second
Thomas Kelly New Plymouth Fifth
William Swanson Newton Fourth
Samuel Shrimski Oamaru Third
Frederick Moss Parnell Third
James Seaton Peninsula Second
Edward Connoly Picton First
James Macandrew Port Chalmers Eighth
John Stevens Rangitikei First
Seymour Thorne George Rodney Third
John Bathgate Roslyn Second
John Hall Selwyn Fifth
John Evans Brown St Albans Third
Walter Pilliet Stanmore First
William White Sydenham First
James Fulton Taieri Second
Robert Trimble Taranaki Second
George Morris Tauranga Second
Charles John Johnston Te Aro First
John Sheehan Thames Fourth
William Levin Thorndon Second
Richard Turnbull Timaru Third
James Clark Brown Tuapeka Fifth
John Blair Whyte Waikato Second
James Green Waikouaiti Second
William Steward Waimate Second
Joseph Shephard Waimea Third
Frederick Alexander Whitaker Waipa Second
William Cowper Smith Waipawa First
George Beetham Wairarapa North Third
Walter Clarke Buchanan Wairarapa South First
Henry Dodson Wairau First
Thomas Young Duncan Waitaki First
William John Hurst Waitemata Second
John Bryce Waitotara Fifth
Cathcart Wason Wakanui Second
Thomas Fergus Wakatipu First
Theophilus Daniel Wallace First
William Hogg Watt Wanganui Second
William Hutchison Wellington South Second
Henare Tomoana X-01Eastern Maori Third
Hone Tawhai X-02Northern Maori Second
Hori Kerei Taiaroa X-03Southern Maori Fourth
Wiremu Te Wheoro X-04Western Maori Second

Notes

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  2. 2.0 2.1 McRobie 1989, pp. 43–48.
  3. McRobie 1989, p. 47.
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  5. Wilson 1985, p. 286.
  6. Wilson 1985, p. 173.
  7. Cooper 1882, pp. 1–3.

References

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