East Sussex | |
Type: | County |
Parliament: | uk |
Year: | 1832 |
Abolished: | 1885 |
Elects Howmany: | two |
Previous: | Sussex |
Next: | Rye Eastbourne East Grinstead Lewes |
East Sussex (formally the Eastern division of Sussex) was a parliamentary constituency in the county of Sussex, which returned two Members of Parliament to the House of Commons of the Parliament of the United Kingdom, elected by the bloc vote system.
It was created under the Great Reform Act for the 1832 general election, when the existing Sussex constituency was divided into two. It consisted of the rapes of Lewes, Pevensey and Hastings, an area broadly similar to but not identical with the modern county of East Sussex. The "place of election", where nominations were taken and the result declared, was Lewes.
East Sussex was abolished for the 1885 general election, being divided between four new single-member county constituencies, Rye, Eastbourne, East Grinstead and Lewes. (Lewes and Rye also absorbed the voters from the abolished boroughs of the same names.)
1832–1885: The Rapes of Lewes, Hastings and Pevensey.[1]
Year | 1st Member | 1st Party | 2nd Member | 2nd Party | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1832 | Hon. Charles Cavendish | Whig[2] [3] | Herbert Barrett Curteis | Whig | |||
1837 | George Darby | Conservative | |||||
1841 | Augustus Fuller | Conservative | |||||
1846 by-election | Charles Frewen | Conservative | |||||
March 1857 by-election | Viscount Pevensey | Conservative | |||||
April 1857 | John George Dodson | Whig[4] | |||||
1859 | Liberal | ||||||
1865 | Lord Edward Cavendish | Liberal | |||||
1868 | George Gregory | Conservative | |||||
1874 | Montagu Scott | Conservative | |||||
1885 | constituency abolished |
Darby resigned after being appointed a Commissioner of Inclosures, causing a by-election.
Frewen resigned by accepting the office of Steward of the Chiltern Hundreds, causing a by-election.