The 11th New Brunswick Legislative Assembly represented New Brunswick between January 20, 1835, and August 18, 1837.
The assembly sat at the pleasure of the Governor of New Brunswick Sir Archibald Campbell.
The speaker of the house was selected as Charles Simonds.
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Electoral District | Name |
---|---|
Saint John County | John R. Partelow |
Charles Simonds | |
George D. Robinson | |
John M. Wilmot | |
York | John Allen |
Jedediah Slason | |
James Taylor | |
Lemuel A. Wilmot | |
Westmorland | Philip Palmer |
William Crane | |
Edward B. Chandler | |
Daniel Hanington | |
Kings | William McLeod |
Samuel Freeze | |
Queens | Hugh Johnston, Jr. |
Thomas Gilbert | |
Charlotte | Thomas Wyer |
James Brown | |
George S. Hill | |
Patrick Clinch | |
Northumberland | Alexander Rankin |
John Ambrose Street | |
Sunbury | Thomas O. Miles |
George Hayward, Jr. | |
Kent | John W. Weldon |
John P. Ford | |
Gloucester | William End |
Peter Stewart | |
Carleton | Jeremiah M. Connell |
George Morehouse | |
Saint John City | Lewis Burns |
Isaac Woodward |
Charles Connell was a Canadian politician, now remembered mainly for placing his image on a 5-cent postage stamp. Born in Northampton in the then-British colony of New Brunswick to a family of Loyalists who had fled the American Revolution, he entered politics in 1846, serving in the colony's Legislative Assembly and House of Assembly.
Woodstock is a town in Carleton County, New Brunswick, Canada on the Saint John River, 103 km upriver from Fredericton at the mouth of the Meduxnekeag River. It is near the Canada–United States border and Houlton, Maine and the intersection of Interstate 95 and the Trans-Canada Highway making it a transportation hub. It is also a service centre for the potato industry and for more than 26,000 people in the nearby communities of Hartland, Florenceville-Bristol, Centreville, Bath and Lakeland Ridges for shopping, employment and entertainment.
Events from the year 1835 in Canada.
The Legislative Assembly of New Brunswick is the deliberative assembly of the New Brunswick Legislature, in the province of New Brunswick, Canada. The assembly's seat is located in Fredericton. It was established in Saint John de jure when the colony was created in 1784 but came into session only in 1786, following the first elections in late 1785. The legislative assembly was originally the lower house in a bicameral legislature. Its upper house counterpart, the Legislative Council of New Brunswick, was abolished in 1891. Its members are called "Members of the Legislative Assembly", commonly referred to as "MLAs".
Robert Duncan Wilmot, was a Canadian politician and a Father of Confederation.
George Craig Ludlow was an American Democratic Party politician, who served as the 25th governor of New Jersey from 1881 to 1884.
John Costigan was a Canadian judge and politician who served in the House of Commons of Canada and in the Cabinet of several Prime Ministers of Canada.
James Herbert Gholson was a nineteenth-century congressman, planter, lawyer and judge from Virginia.
Robert Duncan Wilmot Jr. was a Canadian farmer, businessman and politician.
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William Crane was a merchant, judge and long-term elected provincial legislator in New Brunswick, Canada, serving from 1824–1842.He also was a member of the Legislative Council of New Brunswick from 1843–1850.
Samuel Freeze was a farmer and political figure in New Brunswick. He represented King's County in the Legislative Assembly of New Brunswick in 1820, from 1828 to 1830 and from 1835 to 1844.
John Wesley Weldon was a lawyer, judge and political figure in the Province of New Brunswick, Canada. He represented Kent County in the Legislative Assembly of New Brunswick from 1828.
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Weldford is a geographic parish in Kent County, New Brunswick, Canada.
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