Southwark Central (UK Parliament constituency)

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Southwark (Br [ˈsʌðɨk])[1] Central 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 a very compact and urban area, and was one of three divisions of the Parliamentary Borough of Southwark, which was identical to the Metropolitan Borough of Southwark, in South 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.

Southwark Central
Former Borough constituency
for the House of Commons
19181950
Seatsone
Created fromNewington West
Replaced bySouthwark
Southwark Central in the Parliamentary County of London

As the borough of Southwark had only 67,279 electors on 15 October 1946, the relevant date for the subsequent Boundary Commission review, the borough was only entitled to a single Member of Parliament. As a consequence Southwark Central was abolished as a separate constituency by the Representation of the People Act 1948, along with its neighbours Southwark North and Southwark South East and went out of existence at the 1950 general election, forming part of the re-established Southwark constituency.

Boundaries

Southwark Metropolitan Borough wards in 1916

When the constituency was created, it was defined to include three whole wards of the Metropolitan Borough of Southwark (St Mary's, St Paul's and Trinity) together with a small section of the St George's ward. This formed an area in two main parts linked by a narrow strip of land around Elephant and Castle. The southern section, between Kennington Park Road and Walworth Road, including the St Mary and St Paul wards, was almost entirely residential. It stretched to Kennington Park and to Avenue Road, being the southern boundary of the borough. Around the Elephant and Castle area the constituency included Newington Butts and the Metropolitan Tabernacle, but at its narrowest point it was only about 100 yards between the western boundary on Newington Causeway and the eastern boundary on the railway line through Elephant & Castle railway station.

North of Elephant and Castle, the constituency turned to the east and included a second area of Newington between New Kent Road and Newington Causeway in the Trinity ward. The southern boundary of this part of the constituency continued along New Kent Road to divide St George's ward along it and Tower Bridge Road up to the borough boundary with Bermondsey. The northern part of Trinity ward, north of Wickham Place, was not included.[2] The constituency's last MP, future Chancellor Roy Jenkins, described it as "postage stamp-sized".[3]

Members of Parliament

ElectionMemberParty
1918James Daniel GilbertCoalition Liberal
1922National Liberal
1923Liberal
1924Harry DayLabour
1931Ian HorobinNational
1935Harry DayLabour
1940 by-electionJohn Hanbury MartinLabour
1948 by-electionRoy JenkinsLabour
1950constituency abolished: see Southwark

Elections

Elections in the 1910s

General election 14 December 1918:Electorate 27,699
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
CLiberalJames Daniel Gilbert8,06072.1
LabourLeslie Haden-Guest3,12627.9
Majority4,93444.2
Turnout11,186
Liberal win (new seat)
C indicates candidate endorsed by the coalition government.

Elections in the 1920s

1922 general election: Southwark Central
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
National LiberalJames Daniel Gilbert 10,522 65.6 -6.5
LabourGeorge Dobson Bell5,52234.4+6.5
Majority5,00031.2-13.0
Turnout16,044
National Liberal holdSwing
1923 general election: Southwark Central
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
LiberalJames Daniel Gilbert 8,676 45.3 -20.3
LabourHarry Day6,69034.9+0.5
UnionistCharles Louis Nordon3,80119.8New
Majority1,98610.4-20.8
Turnout21,167
Liberal holdSwing-10.4
1924 general election: Southwark Central
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
LabourHarry Day 9,199 40.0 +5.1
LiberalJames Daniel Gilbert7,81734.1-11.2
ConservativeCharles Louis Nordon5,93725.9+6.1
Majority1,3825.9N/A
Turnout22,953
Labour gain from LiberalSwing
1929 general election: Southwark Central
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
LabourHarry Day 13,318 52.3 +12.3
UnionistEdward Keeling6,25624.6-1.3
LiberalJames Robert Want5,87823.1-11.0
Majority7,06227.7+21.8
Turnout25,452
Labour holdSwing+6.8

Elections in the 1930s

1931 general election: Southwark Central
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
NationalIan Horobin 15,913 65.3 New
LabourHarry Day8,46634.7-17.6
Majority7,44730.6N/A
Turnout24,379
National gain from LabourSwing
1935 general election: Southwark Central
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
LabourHarry Day 11,098 53.3 +18.6
National LabourErnest Stanford9,73546.7New
Majority1,3636.6N/A
Turnout20,833
Labour gain from NationalSwing

Elections in the 1940s

1940 Southwark Central by-election
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
LabourJohn Hanbury Martin 5,285 64.3 +11.0
Anti-WarCharles W. Searson1,55018.9New
NationalViolet Van der Elst1,38216.8New
Majority3,73545.4+38.8
Turnout8,217
Labour holdSwing
1945 general election: Southwark Central
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
LabourJohn Hanbury Martin 9,336 71.9 +18.6
ConservativeWilliam Steward3,65428.1New
Majority5,68243.8+37.2
Turnout12,990
Labour holdSwing
1948 Southwark Central by-election
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
LabourRoy Jenkins 8,744 65.4 -6.5
ConservativeJames Greenwood (MP)4,62334.6+6.5
Majority4,12130.8-13.0
Turnout13,367
Labour holdSwing

References

Sources