Members of Parliament
| Election | Member | Party | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1885 | Alexander Craig Sellar | Liberal | |
| 1886 | Liberal Unionist | ||
| 1890 | James Parker Smith | Liberal Unionist | |
| 1906 | Sir Robert Balfour | Liberal | |
| 1918 | Coalition Liberal | ||
| 1922 | Sir Robert John Collie | National Liberal | |
| 1923 | Andrew Young | Labour Co-operative | |
| 1924 | George Humphrey Maurice Broun-Lindsay | Conservative | |
| 1929 | Adam McKinlay | Labour | |
| 1931 | Charles Glen MacAndrew, later Baron MacAndrew | Conservative | |
| 1935 | Sir Arthur Stewart Leslie Young | Conservative | |
Read more about this topic: Glasgow Partick (UK Parliament Constituency)
Famous quotes containing the words members of, members and/or parliament:
“I have more in common with a Mexican man than with a white woman.... This opinion ... chagrins women who sincerely believe our female physiology unequivocally binds all women throughout the world, despite the compounded social prejudices that daily affect us all in different ways. Although women everywhere experience life differently from men everywhere, white women are members of a race that has proclaimed itself globally superior for hundreds of years.”
—Ana Castillo (b. 1953)
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—Anna Eugenia Morgan (18451909)
“The war shook down the Tsardom, an unspeakable abomination, and made an end of the new German Empire and the old Apostolic Austrian one. It ... gave votes and seats in Parliament to women.... But if society can be reformed only by the accidental results of horrible catastrophes ... what hope is there for mankind in them? The war was a horror and everybody is the worse for it.”
—George Bernard Shaw (18561950)