Plaistow (UK Parliament constituency)

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Plaistow
Former Borough constituency
for the House of Commons
Plaistow within Essex, showing boundaries used from 1918 to 1950.
County Essex
19181950
Number of members One
Replaced by West Ham South
Created from West Ham South

Plaistow was a borough constituency returning a single Member of Parliament to the House of Commons of the Parliament of the United Kingdom through the first-past-the-post voting system. The constituency was one of four divisions of the Parliamentary Borough of West Ham, which had at the time the same boundaries as the County Borough of West Ham. Although administratively separate since 1889, the area was formally part of the county of Essex; since 1965 it has been part of the London Borough of Newham in Greater London.

The creation of the constituency was recommended by the Boundary Commission in a report issued in 1917, and formally created by the Representation of the People Act 1918. It came into existence at the 1918 general election. Its first member was Labour's Will(iam) Thorne who won with an impressive 94.9% of the popular vote, a record for an English parliamentary seat held to this day. As the borough of West Ham had only 120,586 electors on 15 October 1946, the relevant date for the subsequent Boundary Commission review, the borough was only entitled to two Members of Parliament; North and South divisions were recommended. As a consequence Plaistow was abolished as a separate constituency by the Representation of the People Act 1948 and went out of existence at the 1950 general election.

Boundaries

Plaistow was based on Plaistow and Hudsons wards of the County Borough of West Ham. The large wards in the southern County Borough of West Ham at the time of the 1917 Boundary Commission review made it necessary to split one ward across two constituencies, or else the divisions of West Ham would have had significantly different sizes. The ward which was split was the Canning Town ward, with the northern and western part of the ward included in Plaistow: the commissioners drew a line along the centre of the Woolwich branch of the Great Eastern Railway (now the North London Line) from Canning Town station north to join up with Star Lane (near the future Star Lane DLR station), then east along Star Lane, to join up with the ward boundary at Hermit Lane and Beckton Road.[1]

In 1950 the territory of this division was transferred to form part of the West Ham South constituency.

Members of Parliament

Election Member Party
1918 Will Thorne Labour
1945 Elwyn Jones Labour
1950 constituency abolished

Elections

Election Political result Candidate Party Votes % ±%
General election, 1918 [2]
New constituency
Electorate: 33,890
Turnout: 12,813 (37.8%)
Labour win
Majority: 11,499 (89.8%)
Will Thorne Labour 12,156 94.9 N/A
Arnold Lupton Independent Liberal 657 5.1
General election, 1922 [2]
Electorate: 35,602
Turnout: 19,461 (54.7%) +16.9
Labour hold
Majority: 5,181 (26.6%) −63.2
Will Thorne Labour 12,321 63.3 −31.6
F. G. Penny Conservative 7,140 36.7 N/A
General election, 1923 [2]
Electorate: 36,628
Turnout: 18,281 (49.9%) −4.8
Labour hold
Majority: 8,995 (49.2%) +22.6
Swing: 11.3% from Con to Lab
Will Thorne Labour 13,638 74.6 +11.3
F. G. Penny Conservative 4,643 25.4 −11.3
General election, 1924 [2]
Electorate: 37,461
Turnout: 23,247 (62.1%) +12.2
Labour hold
Majority: 7,971 (34.2%) −15.0
Swing: 7.5% from Lab to Con
Will Thorne Labour 16,609 67.1 −7.5
F. G. Penny Conservative 7,638 32.9 +7.5
General election, 1929 [2]
Electorate: 48,232
Turnout: 30,486 (63.2%) +1.1
Labour hold
Majority: 16,784 (55.0%) +20.8
Swing: 10.4% from Con to Lab
Will Thorne Labour 23,635 77.5 +10.4
S. M. Lancaster Conservative 6,851 22.5 −10.4
General election, 1931 [2] Labour hold Will Thorne Labour unopposed
General election, 1935 [2]
Electorate: 47,495
Turnout: 25,223 (53.1%)
Labour hold
Majority: 11,763 (46.6%)
Will Thorne Labour 18,493 73.3
M. D. Roddick Conservative 6,730 26.7
General election, 1945 [2]
Electorate: 28,974
Turnout: 19,814 (68.4%) +13.3
Labour hold
Majority: 14,888 (75.2%) +28.6
Swing: 14.3% from Con to Lab
Elwyn Jones Labour 17,351 87.6 +14.3
J. B. Raper Conservative 2,463 12.4 −14.3

References

  1. "103. Parliamentary Borough of West Ham" in "Report of the Boundary Commission (England and Wales)", vol. III (Cd. 8758).
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 2.6 2.7 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.