ENSIKLOPEDIA Cari Tekan Enter untuk memulai pencarian cepat. Kembali ke Ensiklopedia Arsip Wikipedia Indonesia 1953 North Down by-election 1953 North Down by-electionUK Parliamentary by-election The 1953 North Down by-election was held on 15 April 1953.[1] It was held due to the incumbent Ulster Unionist Party MP, Walter Smiles, dying in the sinking of the MV Princess Victoria off the Copeland Islands, in the same storm which caused the North Sea flood of 1953. It was retained by his daughter, Patricia Ford, who was unopposed when she stood as the Unionist candidate.[1] She became the first woman to sit as an Ulster Unionist MP but she stood down in the 1955 general election. Result 1953 North Down by-election[2] Party Candidate Votes % ±% UUP Patricia Ford Unopposed Registered electors UUP hold External links A Vision Of Britain Through Time References 1 2 "North Down 1950-1970". Northern Ireland elections. ARK, Northern Ireland’s social policy hub. ↑ "1953 By Election Results". by-elections.co.uk. Archived from the original on 10 October 2012. Retrieved 13 August 2015. vteBy-elections in Northern Ireland to the House of Commons of the United Kingdom1920s June 1921: Mid Armagh Belfast Duncairn North Down July 1921: Mid Down West Down August 1921: South Londonderry January 1922: South Londonderry February 1922: West Down North Down June 1922: North Londonderry July 1922: North Down January 1929: Londonderry 1930s March 1931: Fermanagh and Tyrone June 1934: Fermanagh and Tyrone May 1939: Down 1940s February 1940: Belfast East November 1940: Queen's University of Belfast February 1943: Belfast West Antrim June 1946: Down March 1948: Armagh 1950s November 1950: Belfast West May 1951: Londonderry October 1952: North Antrim November 1952: Belfast South April 1953: North Down November 1954: Armagh August 1955: Mid Ulster May 1956: Mid Ulster March 1959: Belfast East 1960s October 1963: Belfast South April 1969: Mid Ulster 1970sNone1980s April 1981: Fermanagh and South Tyrone August 1981: Fermanagh and South Tyrone March 1982: Belfast South January 1986: Antrim North Antrim East Antrim South Belfast East Belfast North Belfast South Down North Down South Fermanagh and South Tyrone Lagan Valley East Londonderry Mid Ulster Strangford Newry and Armagh Upper Bann 1990s May 1990: Upper Bann June 1995: North Down 2000s September 2000: South Antrim 2010s June 2011: Belfast West March 2013: Mid Ulster May 2018: West Tyrone 2020s None to date Lists of UK by-elections 1801–1806 1806–1818 1818–1832 1832–1847 1847–1857 1857–1868 1868–1885 1885–1900 1900–1918 1918–1931 1931–1950 1950–1979 1979–2010 2010–present Northern Ireland Hereditary peers vte« 39th Parliament « By-elections to the 40th Parliament of the United Kingdom » 41st Parliament »1952 February: Bournemouth East and Christchurch Southport Leeds South East July: Dundee East October: Cleveland North Antrim November: Belfast South Wycombe Birmingham Small Heath Farnworth 1953 February: Canterbury March: Isle of Thanet Barnsley Stoke-on-Trent North April: Hayes and Harlington North Down Sunderland South June: Abingdon July: Birmingham Edgbaston September: Broxtowe November: Crosby Ormskirk Holborn and St Pancras South December: Paddington North 1954 February: Ilford North Haltemprice Harwich Bournemouth West March: Arundel and Shoreham Harrogate April: Edinburgh East Motherwell September: Croydon East October: Shoreditch and Finsbury Wakefield Aberdare Aldershot November: Morpeth Sutton and Cheam Liverpool West Derby Armagh December: Inverness 1955 January: South Norfolk Orpington Twickenham Edinburgh North February: Stockport South March: Wrexham Lists of UK by-elections 1801–1806 1806–1818 1818–1832 1832–1847 1847–1857 1857–1868 1868–1885 1885–1900 1900–1918 1918–1931 1931–1950 1950–1979 1979–2010 2010–present Northern Ireland Hereditary peers This article about a by-election to the Parliament of the United Kingdom in Ireland is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by adding missing information.vte