Jump to content

51st General Assembly of Nova Scotia

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
51st General Assembly of Nova Scotia
Majority parliament
23 May 1974 – 12 August 1978
Parliament leaders
PremierGerald Regan
October 28, 1970 – October 5, 1978
Leader of the
Opposition
John Buchanan
March 6, 1971 – October 5, 1978
Party caucuses
GovernmentLiberal Party
OppositionProgressive Conservative Party
RecognizedNew Democratic Party
House of Assembly
Speaker of the
House
Vincent MacLean
May 23, 1974 – October 27, 1976
George Doucet
February 22, 1977 – August 12, 1978
Members46 MLA seats
Sovereign
MonarchElizabeth II
February 6, 1952
Lieutenant
Governor
Clarence Gosse
October 1, 1973
Sessions
1st session
May 23, 1974 – November 27, 1974
2nd session
February 3, 1975 – February 17, 1976
3rd session
February 17, 1976 – May 20, 1976
4th session
February 22, 1977 – February 7, 1978
5th session
February 7, 1978 – August 12, 1978
← 50th → 52nd

The 51st General Assembly of Nova Scotia represented Nova Scotia between May 23, 1974 and August 12, 1978.

Division of seats

[edit]

There were 46 members of the General Assembly, elected in the 1974 Nova Scotia general election.

Leader Party # of Seats
  Gerald Regan Liberal 31
  John Buchanan Progressive Conservative 12
  Jeremy Akerman NDP 3
Total 46

List of members

[edit]
Riding Name Party First elected / previously elected Position
  Annapolis East Gerry Sheehy Progressive Conservative 1970
  Annapolis West Peter Murray Nicholson Liberal 1956
  Antigonish J. William Gillis Liberal 1970
  Cape Breton South Vince MacLean Liberal 1974 speaker
Minister of Lands & Forests (1976)
  Cape Breton Centre James 'Buddy' MacEachern NDP 1974
  Cape Breton North Tom McKeough Progressive Conservative 1960
  Cape Breton Nova Paul MacEwan NDP 1970
  Cape Breton East Jeremy Akerman NDP 1970
  Cape Breton West Allan Sullivan Liberal 1970
  Osborne Fraser (1976) Liberal 1976
  Clare Benoit Comeau Liberal 1967
  Colchester Melinda MacLean Liberal 1974
  Floyd Tucker Liberal 1974
  Cumberland East Roger S. Bacon Progressive Conservative 1970
  Cumberland West D. L. George Henley Progressive Conservative 1963
  Cumberland Centre Guy Brown Liberal 1974
  Dartmouth North Glen M. Bagnell Liberal 1970
  Dartmouth South Roland J. Thornhill Progressive Conservative 1974
  Digby Joseph H. Casey Liberal 1970
  Guysborough A. M. "Sandy" Cameron Liberal 1973
  Halifax Atlantic John Buchanan Progressive Conservative 1967
  Halifax Cornwallis George M. Mitchell Liberal 1970
  Halifax Citadel Ronald Wallace Liberal 1970
  Halifax Chebucto Walter Fitzgerald Liberal 1974
  Halifax Cobequid George Doucet Liberal 1974 speaker (1977)
  Halifax Eastern Shore Alexander Garnet Brown Liberal 1969
  Halifax Needham Gerald Regan Liberal 1967 Premier
  Halifax St. Margarets Leonard L. Pace Liberal 1970
  Hants East Jack Hawkins Liberal 1970
  Hants West Robert D. Lindsay Liberal 1970
  Inverness Bill MacEachern Liberal 1974
  John Archie MacKenzie Liberal 1970
  Kings North Glenn Ells Liberal 1974
  Kings South Harry How Progressive Conservative 1970
  Kings West Frank C. Bezanson Liberal 1971
  Lunenburg Centre Bruce Cochran Progressive Conservative 1974
  Lunenburg East Ronald T. Barkhouse Progressive Conservative 1974
  Lunenburg West Maurice DeLorey Liberal 1970
  Pictou East Donald W. Cameron Progressive Conservative 1974
  Pictou West Dan Reid Liberal 1974
  Pictou Centre Fraser MacLean Progressive Conservative 1974
  Jack MacIsaac (1977) Progressive Conservative 1977
  Queens John Wickwire Progressive Conservative 1974
  Richmond Gaston LeBlanc Liberal 1974
  Shelburne Harold Huskilson Liberal 1970
  Victoria Maynard MacAskil Liberal 1974
  Yarmouth Fraser Mooney Liberal 1970
  Hugh Tinkham Liberal 1974

Former members of the 51st General Assembly

[edit]
Name Party Electoral District Cause of departure Succeeded by Elected
  Allan Sullivan Liberal Cape Breton West named to bench Osborne Fraser, Liberal September 7, 1976
  Fraser MacLean Progressive Conservative Pictou Centre resigned Jack MacIsaac, PC September 6, 1977

References

[edit]
  • "Summary Results from 1867 to 2011" (PDF). Elections Nova Scotia. 2011. Retrieved 2015-04-28.
Preceded by General Assemblies of Nova Scotia
1974–1978
Succeeded by