|
By-election | Date | Incumbent | Party | Winner | Party | Cause |
Guildford |
25 August 1931[35 1] |
Henry Cecil Buckingham |
|
Conservative |
Charles Rhys |
|
Conservative |
Death |
Liverpool Wavertree |
23 June 1931 |
John Abraham Tinne |
|
Conservative |
Ronald Nall-Cain |
|
Conservative |
Resignation |
Manchester Ardwick |
22 June 1931 |
Thomas Lowth |
|
Labour |
Joseph Henderson |
|
Labour |
Death |
Gateshead |
8 June 1931 |
Sir James Benjamin Melville |
|
Labour |
Herbert Evans |
|
Labour |
Death |
Rutherglen |
21 May 1931 |
William Wright |
|
Labour |
David Hardie |
|
Labour |
Death |
Stroud |
21 May 1931 |
Sir Frank Nelson |
|
Conservative |
Walter Robert Dempster Perkins |
|
Conservative |
Resignation |
Ogmore |
19 May 1931 |
Vernon Hartshorn |
|
Labour |
Edward Williams |
|
Labour |
Death |
Glasgow St Rollox |
7 May 1931 |
James Stewart |
|
Labour |
William Leonard |
|
Labour |
Death |
Scarborough and Whitby |
6 May 1931 |
Sidney Herbert |
|
Conservative |
Paul Latham |
|
Conservative |
Resignation |
Ashton-under-Lyne |
30 April 1931[35 2] |
Albert Bellamy |
|
Labour |
John Broadbent |
|
Conservative |
Death |
Woolwich East |
15 April 1931 |
Henry Snell |
|
Labour |
George Hicks |
|
Labour |
Elevation to the peerage |
Sunderland |
26 March 1931[35 2][35 3] |
Alfred Smith |
|
Labour |
Luke Thompson |
|
Conservative |
Death |
Pontypridd |
19 March 1931 |
Thomas Isaac Mardy Jones |
|
Labour |
David Lewis Davies |
|
Labour |
Resignation |
Westminster St George's |
19 March 1931 |
Laming Worthington-Evans |
|
Conservative |
Duff Cooper |
|
Conservative |
Death |
Salisbury |
11 March 1931 |
Hugh Morrison |
|
Conservative |
James Despencer-Robertson |
|
Conservative |
Resignation |
Fermanagh and Tyrone |
7 March 1931[35 1] |
Thomas Harbison |
|
Nationalist |
Cahir Healy |
|
Nationalist |
Death |
Fareham |
20 February 1931 |
John Davidson |
|
Conservative |
Thomas Inskip |
|
Conservative |
Resignation |
Islington East |
19 February 1931 |
Ethel Bentham |
|
Labour |
Leah Manning |
|
Labour |
Death |
Liverpool East Toxteth |
5 February 1931 |
Henry Mond |
|
Conservative |
Patrick Buchan-Hepburn |
|
Conservative |
Succession to the peerage |
Bristol East |
16 January 1931 |
Walter John Baker |
|
Labour |
Stafford Cripps |
|
Labour |
Death |
Whitechapel and St George's |
3 December 1930 |
Harry Gosling |
|
Labour |
James Henry Hall |
|
Labour |
Death |
East Renfrewshire |
28 November 1930 |
Alexander Munro MacRobert |
|
Conservative |
Douglas Douglas-Hamilton |
|
Conservative |
Death |
Shipley |
6 November 1930[35 2] |
William Mackinder |
|
Labour |
James Horace Lockwood |
|
Conservative |
Death |
Paddington South |
30 October 1930[35 4] |
Douglas King |
|
Conservative |
Ernest Taylor |
|
Empire Free Trade Crusade |
Death |
Bromley |
2 September 1930 |
Cuthbert James |
|
Conservative |
Sir Edward Taswell Campbell |
|
Conservative |
Elevation to the peerage |
North Norfolk |
9 July 1930 |
Noel Buxton |
|
Labour |
Lucy Noel-Buxton |
|
Labour |
Death |
Glasgow Shettleston |
26 June 1930 |
John Wheatley |
|
Labour |
John McGovern |
|
Labour |
Death |
Nottingham Central |
27 May 1930 |
Albert James Bennett |
|
Conservative |
Terence James O'Connor |
|
Conservative |
Resignation |
Fulham West |
6 May 1930[35 2] |
George Ernest Spero |
|
Labour |
Cyril Stephen Cobb |
|
Conservative |
Resignation |
Sheffield Brightside |
6 February 1930 |
Arthur Ponsonby |
|
Labour |
Fred Marshall |
|
Labour |
Elevated to the peerage |
Liverpool Scotland |
14 December 1929[35 1][35 5] |
Thomas Power O'Connor |
|
Irish Parliamentary |
David Logan |
|
Labour |
Death |
Tamworth |
2 December 1929 |
Sir Edward Maugar Iliffe |
|
Conservative |
Sir Arthur Herbert Drummond Ramsay-Steel-Maitland |
|
Conservative |
Resignation |
Kilmarnock |
27 September 1929 |
Robert Climie |
|
Labour |
Craigie Mason Aitchison |
|
Labour |
Death |
Twickenham |
8 August 1929 |
William Joynson-Hicks |
|
Conservative |
John Ferguson |
|
Conservative |
Elevated to the peerage |
Leeds South East |
1 August 1929 |
Henry Herman Slesser |
|
Labour |
James Milner |
|
Labour |
Resignation |
Preston |
31 July 1929[35 6] |
William Allen Jowitt |
|
Liberal |
William Allen Jowitt |
|
Labour |
Seeks re-election upon change of party allegiance |
- 1 2 3 An uncontested by-election. The Guildford by-election was initially contested but on 25 August the Liberal candidate withdrew, in light of the changed political situation due to the formation of the National Government the previous day.
- 1 2 3 4 Retained at the 1931 general election.
- ↑ Sunderland was a two member constituency. Both MPs were won by Labour in the 1929 general election and by the Conservatives in the 1931 general election.
- ↑ Taylor joined the Conservative Party in 1931, holding the seat at the 1931 general election.
- ↑ A rare case of a gain in an unopposed election. O'Connor had an ad hoc group of supporters in the constituency who helped his campaign at election times, and Logan had been extensively involved in the Irish nationalist movement in his youth.
- ↑ Preston was a two member constituency. Jowitt was appointed Attorney General of England and Wales in the Labour government and opted to seek re-election in his new party colours. In 1931 he became a National Labour MP but did not recontest Preston in the 1931 general election as he could not secure the withdrawal of Conservative candidates supporting the National Government who took both seats.
|
By-election | Date | Incumbent | Party | Winner | Party | Cause |
North Lanarkshire |
21 March 1929[34 1] |
Alexander Sprot |
|
Conservative |
Jennie Lee |
|
Labour |
Death |
Holland with Boston |
21 March 1929[34 1] |
Arthur Wellesley Dean |
|
Conservative |
James Blindell |
|
Liberal |
Death |
Bath |
21 March 1929 |
Charles Talbot Foxcroft |
|
Conservative |
Charles William Baillie-Hamilton |
|
Conservative |
Death |
Eddisbury |
20 March 1929[34 1] |
Harry Barnston |
|
Conservative |
Richard John Russell |
|
Liberal |
Death |
Liverpool East Toxteth |
19 March 1929 |
Albert Edward Jacob |
|
Conservative |
Henry Mond |
|
Conservative |
Death |
Wansbeck |
13 February 1929 |
George Warne |
|
Labour |
George William Shield |
|
Labour |
Death |
Bishop Auckland |
7 February 1929 |
Ben Spoor |
|
Labour |
Florence Ruth Dalton |
|
Labour |
Death |
Battersea South |
7 February 1929[34 1] |
Francis Curzon |
|
Conservative |
William Bennett |
|
Labour |
Succession to the peerage |
Londonderry |
29 January 1929[34 2] |
Malcolm Macnaghten |
|
UUP |
Ronald Deane Ross |
|
UUP |
Appointment as High Court judge |
Midlothian and Peeblesshire Northern |
29 January 1929[34 3] |
George Aitken Clark Hutchison |
|
Conservative |
Andrew Bathgate Clarke |
|
Labour |
Death |
Ashton-under-Lyne |
29 October 1928[34 1] |
Cornelius William James Homan |
|
Conservative |
Albert Bellamy |
|
Labour |
Declared bankrupt |
Tavistock |
11 October 1928 |
Philip Kenyon-Slaney |
|
Conservative |
Wallace Duffield Wright |
|
Conservative |
Death |
Cheltenham |
26 September 1928 |
James Tynte Agg-Gardner |
|
Conservative |
Walter Reuben Preston |
|
Conservative |
Death |
Aberdeen North |
16 August 1928 |
Frank Herbert Rose |
|
Labour |
William Wedgwood Benn |
|
Labour |
Death |
Sheffield Hallam |
16 July 1928 |
Frederick Sykes |
|
Conservative |
Louis William Smith |
|
Conservative |
Appointed Governor of Bombay |
Halifax |
13 July 1928[34 4] |
John Henry Whitley |
|
Speaker |
Arthur Longbottom |
|
Labour |
Resignation (retired as Speaker) |
Epsom |
4 July 1928 |
George Blades |
|
Conservative |
Archibald Southby |
|
Conservative |
Elevation to the peerage |
Carmarthen |
28 June 1928[34 5] |
Alfred Mond |
|
Liberal/Conservative |
William Nathaniel Jones |
|
Liberal |
Elevation to the Hereditary Peerage |
Holborn |
28 June 1928 |
James Remnant |
|
Conservative |
Stuart James Bevan |
|
Conservative |
Elevation to the peerage |
St Marylebone |
30 April 1928 |
Douglas Hogg |
|
Conservative |
Rennell Rodd |
|
Conservative |
Resignation |
Hanley |
23 April 1928 |
Samuel Clowes |
|
Labour |
Arthur Hollins |
|
Labour |
Death |
Linlithgowshire |
4 April 1928[34 1] |
James Kidd |
|
Conservative |
Emanuel Shinwell |
|
Labour |
Death |
Middlesbrough West |
7 March 1928 |
Walter Trevelyan Thomson |
|
Liberal |
Frank Kingsley Griffith |
|
Liberal |
Death |
St Ives |
6 March 1928[34 1] |
John Anthony Hawke |
|
Conservative |
Hilda Runciman |
|
Liberal |
Appointment as a High Court Judge |
Ilford |
23 February 1928 |
Fredric Wise |
|
Conservative |
George Clements Hamilton |
|
Conservative |
Death |
Lancaster |
9 February 1928[34 3] |
Gerald Strickland |
|
Conservative |
Robert Parkinson Tomlinson |
|
Liberal |
Elevation to the Hereditary Peerage |
Bristol West |
2 February 1928 |
George Gibbs |
|
Conservative |
Cyril Culverwell |
|
Conservative |
Elevation to the peerage |
Faversham |
25 January 1928 |
Granville Wheler |
|
Conservative |
Adam Maitland |
|
Conservative |
Death |
Northampton |
9 January 1928[34 1] |
Arthur Edward Aveling Holland |
|
Conservative |
Cecil L'Estrange Malone |
|
Labour |
Death |
Canterbury |
24 November 1927 |
Ronald McNeill |
|
Conservative |
William Wayland |
|
Conservative |
Elevation to the peerage |
Southend |
19 November 1927 |
Rupert Guinness |
|
Conservative |
Gwendolen Guinness |
|
Conservative |
Succession to the peerage |
Brixton |
27 June 1927 |
Davison Alexander Dalziel |
|
Conservative |
Nigel Colman |
|
Conservative |
Elevation to the peerage |
Westbury |
16 June 1927 |
Walter William Shaw |
|
Conservative |
Richard Long |
|
Conservative |
Death |
Bosworth |
31 May 1927[34 1] |
Robert Gee |
|
Conservative |
William Edge |
|
Liberal |
Resignation |
Combined Scottish Universities |
26–29 April 1927 |
Henry Craik |
|
Conservative |
John Buchan |
|
Conservative |
Death |
Southwark North |
28 March 1927[34 6] |
Leslie Haden-Guest |
|
Labour |
Edward Anthony Strauss |
|
Liberal |
Sought re-election upon change of party allegiance |
Leith |
23 March 1927 |
William Wedgwood Benn |
|
Liberal |
Ernest Brown |
|
Liberal |
Resignation |
Stourbridge |
23 February 1927[34 1] |
Douglas Percival Pielou |
|
Conservative |
Wilfred Wellock |
|
Labour |
Death |
Smethwick |
21 December 1926 |
John Emanuel Davison |
|
Labour |
Oswald Mosley |
|
Labour |
Resignation |
Chelmsford |
30 November 1926 |
Henry Honywood Curtis-Bennett |
|
Conservative |
Charles Kenneth Howard-Bury |
|
Conservative |
Resignation |
Kingston-upon-Hull Central |
29 November 1926[34 1] |
Joseph Montague Kenworthy |
|
Liberal |
Joseph Montague Kenworthy |
|
Labour |
Seeks re-election upon change of party allegiance |
Howdenshire |
25 November 1926 |
Stanley Jackson |
|
Conservative |
William Henton Carver |
|
Conservative |
Resignation |
North Cumberland |
17 September 1926 |
Donald Howard |
|
Conservative |
Fergus Graham |
|
Conservative |
Succession to the peerage |
Wallsend |
21 July 1926 |
Patrick Hastings |
|
Labour |
Margaret Bondfield |
|
Labour |
Resignation |
Hammersmith North |
20 May 1926[34 1] |
Ellis Ashmead-Bartlett |
|
Conservative |
James Patrick Gardner |
|
Labour |
Resignation |
Buckrose |
5 May 1926 |
Guy Gaunt |
|
Conservative |
Albert Newby Braithwaite |
|
Conservative |
Resignation |
East Ham North |
29 April 1926[34 1] |
Charles Williamson Crook |
|
Conservative |
Arabella Susan Lawrence |
|
Labour |
Death |
Bothwell |
26 March 1926 |
John Robertson |
|
Labour |
Joseph Sullivan |
|
Labour |
Death |
Combined English Universities |
8–12 March 1926[34 7] |
Herbert Albert Laurens Fisher |
|
Liberal |
Alfred Hopkinson |
|
Conservative |
Resignation |
Darlington |
17 February 1926[34 1] |
William Edwin Pease |
|
Conservative |
Arthur Lewis Shepherd |
|
Labour |
Death |
Cambridge University |
13 February 1926[34 8] |
John Rawlinson |
|
Conservative |
John James Withers |
|
Conservative |
Death |
East Renfrewshire |
29 January 1926 |
Alexander Munro MacRobert |
|
Conservative |
Alexander Munro MacRobert |
|
Conservative |
Appointed Solicitor General for Scotland |
Dunbartonshire |
29 January 1926 |
David Pinkerton Fleming |
|
Conservative |
John Gibb Thom |
|
Conservative |
Appointed to the Court of Session |
Ripon |
5 December 1925 |
Edward Wood |
|
Conservative |
John Waller Hills |
|
Conservative |
Resignation |
Bury St Edmunds |
1 December 1925 |
Walter Edward Guinness |
|
Conservative |
Walter Edward Guinness |
|
Conservative |
Appointed Minister of Agriculture and Fisheries |
Galloway |
17 November 1925 |
Arthur Henniker-Hughan |
|
Conservative |
Sidney Richard Streatfield |
|
Conservative |
Death |
Stockport |
17 September 1925[34 9] |
William Greenwood |
|
Conservative |
Arnold Ernest Townend |
|
Labour |
Death |
Forest of Dean |
14 July 1925 |
James Wignall |
|
Labour |
Albert Arthur Purcell |
|
Labour |
Death |
Oldham |
24 June 1925 |
Edward Grigg |
|
Liberal |
William Wiggins |
|
Liberal |
Resignation |
Eastbourne |
17 June 1925 |
George Lloyd |
|
Conservative |
William Reginald Hall |
|
Conservative |
Resignation |
Ayr Burghs |
12 June 1925 |
John Baird |
|
Conservative |
Thomas Cecil Moore |
|
Conservative |
Appointed Governor-General of Australia |
Walsall |
27 February 1925 |
William Preston |
|
Conservative |
William Preston |
|
Conservative |
Disqualification |
Dundee |
22 December 1924 |
E. D. Morel |
|
Labour |
Thomas Johnston |
|
Labour |
Death |
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 Gain retained at the 1929 general election.
- ↑ An uncontested election.
- 1 2 Gain not retained at the 1929 general election.
- ↑ Prior to his elevation to Speaker of the House of Commons, John Henry Whitley had been a Liberal MP.
- ↑ Alfred Mond was elected in the 1924 general election as a Liberal but moved to the Conservative Party in Parliament. The Liberals retook his seat in the by-election but lost it to Labour in the 1929 general election.
- ↑ Haden-Guest left the Labour Party and sought re-election as a Constitutionalist, but the seat was gained by the Liberals. In the 1929 general election the seat was regained by the Labour Party.
- ↑ The Combined English Universities was a two-member constituency. In the 1924 general election it elected one Conservative and one Liberal. The Conservatives gained the Liberal seat but in the 1929 general election the two seats were won by one Conservative and one Independent (Eleanor Rathbone).
- ↑ An uncontested election.
- ↑ Stockport was a two member constituency. In the 1924 general election it elected two Conservative MPs. One seat was lost to the Labour Party in the 1926 by-election. In the 1929 general election the Conservative and Labour Parties won one seat apiece.
|
By-election | Date | Incumbent | Party | Winner | Party | Cause |
Carmarthen |
14 August 1924 |
Ellis Ellis-Griffith |
|
Liberal |
Alfred Mond |
|
Liberal |
Resignation |
Holland with Boston |
31 July 1924[33 1] |
William Stapleton Royce |
|
Labour |
Arthur Wellesley Dean |
|
Conservative |
Death |
Lewes |
9 July 1924 |
William Campion |
|
Conservative |
Tufton Percy Hamilton Beamish |
|
Conservative |
Appointment as Governor of Western Australia |
Oxford |
5 June 1924[33 1] |
Frank Gray |
|
Liberal |
Robert Croft Bourne |
|
Conservative |
Election declared void |
Glasgow Kelvingrove |
23 May 1924 |
William Hutchison |
|
Conservative |
Walter Elliot |
|
Conservative |
Death |
Liverpool West Toxteth |
22 May 1924[33 1] |
Robert Paterson Houston |
|
Conservative |
Joseph Gibbins |
|
Labour |
Resignation |
Westminster Abbey |
19 March 1924 |
John Nicholson |
|
Conservative |
Otho Nicholson |
|
Conservative |
Death |
Dover |
12 March 1924[33 2] |
John Astor |
|
Conservative |
John Astor |
|
Conservative |
Voted before taking the Oath of Allegiance |
Burnley |
28 February 1924 |
David Irving |
|
Labour |
Arthur Henderson |
|
Labour |
Death |
City of London |
1 February 1924 |
Frederick George Banbury |
|
Conservative |
Thomas Vansittart Bowater |
|
Conservative |
Elevation to the peerage |
- 1 2 3 Gain retained at the 1924 general election.
- ↑ An uncontested by-election.
|
By-election | Date | Incumbent | Party | Winner | Party | Cause |
Yeovil |
30 October 1923 |
Aubrey Herbert |
|
Conservative |
George Davies |
|
Conservative |
Death |
Rutland and Stamford |
30 October 1923 |
Charles Harvey Dixon |
|
Conservative |
Neville Woodford Smith-Carington |
|
Conservative |
Death |
Portsmouth South |
13 August 1923 |
Leslie Orme Wilson |
|
Conservative |
Herbert Robin Cayzer |
|
Conservative |
Resignation |
Leeds Central |
26 July 1923 |
Arthur Wellesley Willey |
|
Conservative |
Charles Henry Wilson |
|
Conservative |
Death |
Tiverton |
21 June 1923[32 1] |
Herbert Weston Sheppard Sparkes |
|
Conservative |
Francis Dyke Acland |
|
Liberal |
Death |
Morpeth |
21 June 1923 |
John Cairns |
|
Labour |
Robert Smillie |
|
Labour |
Death |
Berwick-upon-Tweed |
31 May 1923[32 1] |
Hilton Philipson |
|
National Liberal |
Mabel Philipson |
|
Conservative |
Void election (electoral fraud) |
Ludlow |
19 April 1923 |
Ivor Windsor-Clive |
|
Conservative |
George Windsor-Clive |
|
Conservative |
Succession to the peerage |
Anglesey |
7 April 1923[32 1] |
Owen Thomas |
|
Independent Labour |
Sir Robert John Thomas |
|
Liberal |
Death |
Liverpool Edge Hill |
6 March 1923[32 1] |
William Watson Rutherford |
|
Conservative |
John Henry Hayes |
|
Labour |
Resignation |
Mitcham |
3 March 1923[32 2] |
Richard James Meller |
|
Conservative |
James Chuter Ede |
|
Labour |
Resignation |
Willesden East |
3 March 1923[32 1] |
Sir H. M. Mallaby-Deeley |
|
Conservative |
Harcourt Johnstone |
|
Liberal |
Resignation |
Darlington |
28 February 1923 |
Herbert Pike Pease |
|
Conservative |
William Edwin Pease |
|
Conservative |
Elevation to the peerage |
Whitechapel and St George's |
8 February 1923 |
Charles James Mathew |
|
Labour |
Harry Gosling |
|
Labour |
Death |
Newcastle-upon-Tyne East |
17 January 1923 |
Joseph Nicholas Bell |
|
Labour |
Arthur Henderson |
|
Labour |
Death |
Portsmouth South |
3 December 1922 |
Herbert Robin Cayzer |
|
Conservative |
Leslie Orme Wilson |
|
Conservative |
Resignation |
- 1 2 3 4 5 Gain retained at the 1923 general election.
- ↑ Gain not retained at the 1923 general election.
Some precise party allegiances are difficult to determine as during this Parliament the Liberal and Conservative Parties were both divided over whether or not to continue support for the Lloyd George Coalition Government. Some opponents of the Coalition ran and/or sat as Independent Liberals or Conservatives respectively; however other opponents were able to secure official nominations. It is not always clear just where an individual MP or officially endorsed candidate stood on the Coalition at the point of election and there are several who appear to have given ambiguous information at the time or to have switched wings once in Parliament. |
By-election | Date | Incumbent | Party | Winner | Party | Cause |
Newport (Monmouthshire) |
18 October 1922[31 1] |
Lewis Haslam |
|
Coalition Liberal |
Reginald Clarry |
|
Conservative |
Death |
Hackney South |
18 August 1922[31 2] |
Horatio Bottomley |
|
Independent |
Clifford Erskine-Bolst |
|
Coalition Conservative |
Expelled from the House (convicted of fraud) |
Pontypridd |
25 July 1922[31 1] |
Thomas Arthur Lewis |
|
Coalition Liberal |
Thomas Isaac Mardy Jones |
|
Labour |
Appointed as a Junior Lord of the Treasury |
North Down |
21 July 1922[31 3] |
Henry Hughes Wilson |
|
UUP |
John Morrow Simms |
|
UUP |
Death |
Gower |
20 July 1922 |
John Williams |
|
Labour |
David Grenfell |
|
Labour |
Death |
Nottingham East |
29 June 1922 |
John David Rees |
|
Coalition Conservative |
John Plowright Houfton |
|
Coalition Conservative |
Death |
Banbury |
22 June 1922[31 3] |
Rhys Rhys-Williams |
|
Coalition Liberal |
Rhys Rhys-Williams |
|
Coalition Liberal |
Appointed Recorder of Cardiff |
Moray and Nairn |
21 June 1922[31 3] |
Archibald Williamson |
|
Coalition Liberal |
Thomas Maule Guthrie |
|
Coalition Liberal |
Elevation to the peerage |
Newbury |
10 June 1922[31 3] |
William Arthur Mount |
|
Coalition Conservative |
Howard Clifton Brown |
|
Coalition Conservative |
Resignation |
North Londonderry |
4 June 1922[31 3] |
Hugh Thom Barrie |
|
UUP |
Malcolm Macnaghten |
|
UUP |
Death |
City of London |
19 May 1922 |
Arthur Balfour |
|
Coalition Conservative |
Edward Charles Grenfell |
|
Coalition Conservative |
Elevation to the peerage |
Clapham |
9 May 1922[31 3] |
Sir Arthur du Cros, Bt |
|
Coalition Conservative |
Sir John Leigh, Bt |
|
Coalition Conservative |
Resignation |
Leicester East |
30 March 1922[31 4] |
Gordon Hewart |
|
Coalition Liberal |
George Banton |
|
Labour |
Appointment as Lord Chief Justice of England and Wales |
Chertsey |
24 March 1922 |
Donald MacMaster |
|
Coalition Conservative |
Philip Wigham Richardson |
|
Coalition Conservative |
Death |
Inverness |
16 March 1922 |
Thomas Brash Morison |
|
Coalition Liberal |
Murdoch MacDonald |
|
Coalition Liberal |
Resignation |
Cambridge |
16 March 1922 |
Eric Geddes |
|
Coalition Conservative |
George Newton |
|
Coalition Conservative |
Resignation |
Liverpool Exchange |
13 March 1922[31 3] |
Leslie Frederic Scott |
|
Coalition Conservative |
Leslie Frederic Scott |
|
Coalition Conservative |
Appointed as Solicitor General |
Wolverhampton West |
7 March 1922 |
Alfred Frederick Bird |
|
Coalition Conservative |
Robert Bland Bird |
|
Coalition Conservative |
Death |
Bodmin |
24 February 1922[31 1] |
Charles Augustin Hanson |
|
Coalition Conservative |
Isaac Foot |
|
Liberal |
Death |
North Down |
21 February 1922[31 3] |
Thomas Watters Brown |
|
UUP |
Henry Hughes Wilson |
|
UUP |
Appointed to the High Court of Northern Ireland |
Camberwell North |
20 February 1922[31 1] |
Henry Newton Knights |
|
Coalition Conservative |
Charles Ammon |
|
Labour |
Resignation (bankruptcy) |
Manchester Clayton |
18 February 1922[31 4] |
Edward Hopkinson |
|
Coalition Conservative |
John Edward Sutton |
|
Labour |
Death |
West Down |
17 February 1922[31 3] |
Thomas Browne Wallace |
|
UUP |
Hugh Hayes |
|
UUP |
Appointed Chief Clerk to the High Court of Northern Ireland |
South Londonderry |
18 January 1922[31 3] |
Robert Chichester |
|
UUP |
Sir William Hacket Pain |
|
UUP |
Death |
Tamworth |
17 January 1922 |
Henry Wilson-Fox |
|
Coalition Conservative |
Sir Percy Newson, Bt |
|
Coalition Conservative |
Death |
Ludlow |
4 January 1922[31 3] |
Beville Stanier |
|
Coalition Conservative |
Ivor Windsor-Clive |
|
Coalition Conservative |
Death |
Southwark South East |
14 December 1921[31 5] |
James Arthur Dawes |
|
Coalition Liberal |
Thomas Ellis Naylor |
|
Labour |
Death |
Hornsey |
10 November 1921 |
William Kennedy Jones |
|
Conservative |
William Ward |
|
Conservative |
Death |
Westhoughton |
5 October 1921 |
William Tyson Wilson |
|
Labour |
Rhys John Davies |
|
Labour |
Death |
Louth |
22 September 1921[31 6] |
Thomas Wintringham |
|
Liberal |
Margaret Wintringham |
|
Liberal |
Death |
Lewisham West |
13 September 1921 |
Edward Feetham Coates |
|
Conservative |
Philip Dawson |
|
Conservative |
Death |
South Londonderry |
29 August 1921[31 3] |
Denis Henry |
|
UUP |
Robert Chichester |
|
UUP |
Appointed Lord Chief Justice of Northern Ireland |
Westminster Abbey |
25 August 1921 |
William Burdett-Coutts |
|
Conservative |
John Sanctuary Nicholson |
|
Conservative |
Death |
Caerphilly |
24 August 1921 |
Alfred Onions |
|
Labour |
Morgan Jones |
|
Labour |
Death |
Hertford |
16 July 1921 |
Noel Pemberton Billing |
|
Independent |
Murray Sueter |
|
Anti-Waste League and Independent |
Resignation (ill-health) |
Heywood and Radcliffe |
8 July 1921[31 5] |
Albert Illingworth |
|
Coalition Liberal |
Walter Halls |
|
Labour |
Elevation to the peerage |
Westminster St George's |
7 July 1921[31 7] |
Walter Long |
|
Coalition Conservative |
James Malcolm Monteith Erskine |
|
Anti-Waste League |
Elevation to the peerage |
Mid Down |
2 July 1921[31 3] |
James Craig |
|
UUP |
Robert Sharman-Crawford |
|
UUP |
Elected Prime Minister of Northern Ireland |
Mid Armagh |
23 June 1921[31 3] |
James Rolston Lonsdale |
|
UUP |
Henry Bruce Armstrong |
|
UUP |
Death |
Belfast Duncairn |
23 June 1921[31 3] |
Edward Carson |
|
UUP |
Thomas Edward McConnell |
|
UUP |
Appointed Lord of Appeal in Ordinary |
North Down |
23 June 1921[31 3] |
Thomas Watters Brown |
|
UUP |
Thomas Watters Brown |
|
UUP |
Appointed Solicitor-General for Ireland |
West Down |
23 June 1921[31 3] |
Daniel Martin Wilson |
|
UUP |
Thomas Browne Wallace |
|
UUP |
Appointed Recorder of Belfast |
Orkney and Shetland |
17 May 1921[31 3] |
Cathcart Wason |
|
Coalition Liberal |
Malcolm Smith |
|
Coalition Liberal |
Death |
Abingdon |
14 May 1921[31 3] |
John Tyson Wigan |
|
Coalition Conservative |
Arthur Thomas Loyd |
|
Coalition Conservative |
Resignation |
Penrith and Cockermouth |
13 May 1921 |
James William Lowther |
|
Coalition Conservative |
Cecil Lowther |
|
Coalition Conservative |
Resignation |
Hastings |
4 May 1921 |
Laurance Lyon |
|
Coalition Conservative |
Lord Eustace Percy |
|
Coalition Conservative |
Resignation |
Chichester |
23 April 1921[31 3] |
Lord Edmund Bernard Talbot |
|
Coalition Conservative |
William Bird |
|
Coalition Conservative |
Resignation |
Bedford |
23 April 1921 |
Frederick Kellaway |
|
Coalition Liberal |
Frederick Kellaway |
|
Coalition Liberal |
Appointed Postmaster General |
Bewdley |
19 April 1921 |
Stanley Baldwin |
|
Coalition Conservative |
Stanley Baldwin |
|
Coalition Conservative |
Appointed President of the Board of Trade |
Eddisbury |
19 April 1921[31 3] |
Harry Barnston |
|
Coalition Conservative |
Harry Barnston |
|
Coalition Conservative |
Appointed Comptroller of the Household |
East Dorset |
16 April 1921[31 3] |
Frederick Edward Guest |
|
Coalition Liberal |
Frederick Edward Guest |
|
Coalition Liberal |
Appointed Secretary of State for Air |
Glasgow Pollok |
14 April 1921[31 3] |
John Gilmour |
|
Coalition Conservative |
John Gilmour |
|
Coalition Conservative |
Appointed Junior Lord of the Treasury |
Bristol West |
9 April 1921[31 3] |
George Gibbs |
|
Coalition Conservative |
George Gibbs |
|
Coalition Conservative |
Appointed Treasurer of the Household |
Taunton |
8 April 1921 |
Dennis Fortescue Boles |
|
Coalition Conservative |
Arthur Griffith-Boscawen |
|
Coalition Conservative |
Resignation |
Birmingham West |
31 March 1921[31 3] |
Austen Chamberlain |
|
Coalition Conservative |
Austen Chamberlain |
|
Coalition Conservative |
Appointed Lord Privy Seal |
Penistone |
5 March 1921[31 4] |
Sydney Arnold |
|
Liberal |
William Gillis |
|
Labour |
Resignation |
Kirkcaldy Burghs |
4 March 1921[31 5] |
James Henry Dalziel |
|
Coalition Liberal |
Thomas Kennedy |
|
Labour |
Resignation |
Birmingham Moseley |
4 March 1921[31 3] |
Hallewell Rogers |
|
Coalition Conservative |
Patrick Hannon |
|
Coalition Conservative |
Resignation |
Dudley |
3 March 1921[31 4] |
Arthur Griffith-Boscawen |
|
Coalition Conservative |
James Wilson |
|
Labour |
Appointment as Minister of Agriculture |
Woolwich East |
2 March 1921[31 4] |
Will Crooks |
|
Labour |
Robert Gee |
|
Coalition Conservative |
Death |
Cardiganshire |
18 February 1921 |
Matthew Vaughan-Davies |
|
Coalition Liberal |
Ernest Evans |
|
Coalition Liberal |
Elevated to the peerage |
Dover |
12 January 1921[31 8] |
Viscount Duncannon |
|
Coalition Conservative |
Thomas Andrew Polson |
|
Independent |
Succession to the Peerage |
Hereford |
11 January 1921 |
Charles Thornton Pulley |
|
Coalition Conservative |
Samuel Roberts |
|
Coalition Conservative |
Resignation |
Abertillery |
21 December 1920 |
William Brace |
|
Labour |
George Barker |
|
Labour |
Resignation |
Rhondda West |
21 December 1920 |
William Abraham |
|
Labour |
William John |
|
Labour |
Resignation |
Middleton and Prestwich |
22 November 1920[31 3] |
Sir William Adkins |
|
Coalition Liberal |
Sir William Adkins |
|
Coalition Liberal |
Appointed Recorder of Birmingham |
The Wrekin |
20 November 1920[31 9] |
Charles Frederick Palmer |
|
Independent |
Sir C. V. F. Townshend |
|
Independent |
Death |
Hemel Hempstead |
9 November 1920[31 3] |
Gustavus Talbot |
|
Coalition Conservative |
John Davidson |
|
Coalition Conservative |
Death |
Ilford |
25 September 1920 |
William Peter Griggs |
|
Coalition Conservative |
Fredric Wise |
|
Coalition Conservative |
Death |
Woodbridge |
28 July 1920 |
Robert Francis Peel |
|
Coalition Conservative |
Sir Arthur Churchman, Bt |
|
Coalition Conservative |
Resignation |
South Norfolk |
27 July 1920[31 10] |
William Cozens-Hardy |
|
Coalition Liberal |
George Edwards |
|
Labour |
Succession to the peerage |
Ebbw Vale |
26 July 1920[31 3] |
Thomas Richards |
|
Labour |
Evan Davies |
|
Labour |
Resignation |
Nelson and Colne |
17 June 1920 |
Albert Smith |
|
Labour |
Robinson Graham |
|
Labour |
Resignation |
Louth |
3 June 1920[31 6] |
Henry Langton Brackenbury |
|
Coalition Conservative |
Thomas Wintringham |
|
Liberal |
Death |
Sunderland |
24 April 1920 |
Hamar Greenwood |
|
Coalition Liberal |
Hamar Greenwood |
|
Coalition Liberal |
Appointed Chief Secretary for Ireland |
Edinburgh North |
9 April 1920 |
James Avon Clyde |
|
Coalition Conservative |
Patrick Johnstone Ford |
|
Coalition Conservative |
Resignation |
Edinburgh South |
9 April 1920 |
Charles David Murray |
|
Coalition Conservative |
Charles David Murray |
|
Coalition Conservative |
Appointed Solicitor General for Scotland |
Northampton |
1 April 1920 |
Charles McCurdy |
|
Coalition Liberal |
Charles McCurdy |
|
Coalition Liberal |
Appointed Minister of Food Control |
Basingstoke |
31 March 1920 |
Auckland Campbell Geddes |
|
Coalition Conservative |
Arthur Richard Holbrook |
|
Coalition Conservative |
Resignation |
Camberwell North West |
31 March 1920 |
Thomas James McNamara |
|
Coalition Liberal |
Thomas James McNamara |
|
Coalition Liberal |
Appointed Minister of Labour |
Dartford |
27 March 1920[31 11] |
James Rowlands |
|
Coalition Liberal |
John Edmund Mills |
|
Labour |
Death |
Stockport |
27 March 1920 |
Spencer Leigh Hughes |
|
Coalition Liberal |
Henry Fildes |
|
Coalition Liberal |
Death |
George Wardle |
|
Coalition Labour |
William Greenwood |
|
Coalition Conservative |
Resignation |
Argyll |
10 March 1920 |
William Sutherland |
|
Coalition Liberal |
William Sutherland |
|
Coalition Liberal |
Appointed as a Junior Lord of the Treasury |
Horncastle |
25 February 1920 |
William Weigall |
|
Coalition Conservative |
Stafford Vere Hotchkin |
|
Coalition Conservative |
Appointed Governor of South Australia |
Paisley |
12 February 1920 |
John Mills McCallum |
|
Liberal |
Herbert Henry Asquith |
|
Liberal |
Death |
The Wrekin |
7 February 1920[31 9] |
Sir Charles Henry Bt |
|
Coalition Liberal |
Charles Frederick Palmer |
|
Independent |
Death |
Ashton-under-Lyne |
31 January 1920 |
Albert Henry Stanley |
|
Coalition Conservative |
Walter de Frece |
|
Coalition Conservative |
Elevation to the peerage |
Spen Valley |
20 December 1919[31 12] |
Thomas Palmer Whittaker |
|
Coalition Liberal |
Tom Myers |
|
Labour |
Death |
Bromley |
17 December 1919 |
Henry Forster |
|
Coalition Conservative |
Cuthbert James |
|
Coalition Conservative |
Elevation to the peerage |
St Albans |
10 December 1919 |
Sir Edward Hildred Carlile |
|
Coalition Conservative |
Francis Edward Fremantle |
|
Coalition Conservative |
Resignation |
Plymouth Sutton |
28 November 1919[1] |
Waldorf Astor |
|
Coalition Conservative |
Nancy Astor |
|
Coalition Conservative |
Succession to the peerage |
Isle of Thanet |
15 November 1919 |
Norman Carlyle Craig |
|
Conservative |
Esmond Harmsworth |
|
Conservative |
Death |
Croydon South |
14 November 1919 |
Ian Malcolm |
|
Coalition Conservative |
Allan Smith |
|
Coalition Conservative |
Resignation |
Chester-le-Street |
13 November 1919 |
John Wilkinson Taylor |
|
Labour |
Jack Lawson |
|
Labour |
Resignation |
Manchester Rusholme |
7 October 1919 |
Robert Burdon Stoker |
|
Coalition Conservative |
John Henry Thorpe |
|
Coalition Conservative |
Death |
Pontefract |
6 September 1919 |
Joseph Compton-Rickett |
|
Coalition Liberal |
Walter Forrest |
|
Coalition Liberal |
Death |
Widnes |
30 August 1919[31 4] |
William Hall Walker |
|
Coalition Conservative |
Arthur Henderson |
|
Labour |
Elevation to the peerage |
Dublin University |
28 July 1919[31 3] |
Arthur Warren Samuels |
|
Irish Unionist |
William Morgan Jellett |
|
Irish Unionist |
Appointed to the Irish High Court |
Bothwell |
16 July 1919[31 1] |
David Henderson Macdonald |
|
Coalition Conservative |
John Robertson |
|
Labour |
Death |
Swansea East |
10 July 1919 |
Thomas Jeremiah Williams |
|
Coalition Liberal |
David Matthews |
|
Coalition Liberal |
Death |
East Antrim |
27 May 1919[31 13] |
Robert Chaine Alexander McCalmont |
|
Irish Unionist |
George Boyle Hanna |
|
Independent Unionist |
Appointed Commander of the Irish Guards |
Aberdeenshire and Kincardineshire Central |
16 April 1919[31 1] |
Alexander Theodore Gordon |
|
Coalition Conservative |
Murdoch McKenzie Wood |
|
Liberal |
Death |
Kingston upon Hull Central |
29 March 1919[31 1] |
Sir Mark Sykes |
|
Coalition Conservative |
Hon. Joseph Kenworthy |
|
Liberal |
Death |
Oxford University |
19–24 March 1919 |
Rowland Prothero |
|
Coalition Conservative |
Charles Oman |
|
Coalition Conservative |
Elevation to the peerage |
North Londonderry |
4 March 1919 |
Hugh Alfred Anderson |
|
Irish Unionist |
Hugh Thom Barrie |
|
Irish Unionist |
Resignation |
Leyton West |
1 March 1919[31 4] |
Harry Wrightson |
|
Coalition Conservative |
Alfred Ernest Newbould |
|
Liberal |
Death |
Liverpool West Derby |
26 February 1919 |
Frederick Edwin Smith |
|
Coalition Conservative |
William Reginald Hall |
|
Coalition Conservative |
Elevated to the peerage |