Members of Parliament
Election | Member | Party | |
---|---|---|---|
1885 | Sir Mathew Wilson | Liberal | |
1886 | Walter Morrison | Liberal Unionist | |
1892 | Charles Savile Roundell | Liberal | |
1895 | Walter Morrison | Liberal Unionist | |
1900 | Frederick Whitley Thomson | Liberal | |
1906 | William Clough | Liberal | |
1918 | Richard Foulis Roundell | Conservative | |
1924 | Ernest Roy Bird | Conservative | |
1933 by-election | George William Rickards | Conservative | |
1944 by-election | Hugh McDowall Lawson | Common Wealth | |
1945 | Burnaby Drayson | Conservative | |
1979 | John Watson | Conservative | |
1983 | constituency abolished: see Skipton & Ripon |
Read more about this topic: Skipton (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)
“A multitude of little superfluous precautions engender here a population of deputies and sub-officials, each of whom acquits himself with an air of importance and a rigorous precision, which seemed to say, though everything is done with much silence, Make way, I am one of the members of the grand machine of state.”
—Marquis De Custine (17901857)
“At the ramparts on the cliff near the old Parliament House I counted twenty-four thirty-two-pounders in a row, pointed over the harbor, with their balls piled pyramid-wise between them,there are said to be in all about one hundred and eighty guns mounted at Quebec,all which were faithfully kept dusted by officials, in accordance with the motto, In time of peace prepare for war; but I saw no preparations for peace: she was plainly an uninvited guest.”
—Henry David Thoreau (18171862)