The 1901 Auckland City Council election was a local election held on 24 April in Auckland, New Zealand as part of that year's nation-wide local elections. Voters elected the mayor of Auckland City for a one year term and 15 city councillors for a two year term.[1] In person voting and the first-past-the-post voting system were used.
Background
For Auckland Council, elections were held in three wards: South (3 positions; 5 candidates), Ponsonby (3 positions; 4 candidates), and Grafton (3 positions; 5 candidates).[2]In the North and East wards, there were three candidates in each ward, which matched the number of positions available, and these candidates were therefore declared elected unopposed.[3] In total, 15 positions were available and 20 candidates stood in the various wards.
Campaign
The Liberal and Labour Federation ran 9 candidates and endorsed Campbell for mayor.[4][5] Frederick Baume was elected as an independent but was a member of the Liberal Association.[6]
The Workers' Municipal Reform League endorsed Arthur Rosser, a Liberal–Labour candiate, in the South ward.[7]
Results
Mayor
John Logan Campbell defeated Daniel Arkell in an overwhelming landslide victory.
Council
East ward
North ward
| Affiliation | Candidate | Votes | % |
| | Independent | Peter Dignan | unopposed |
| | Independent | John Henry Hannan | unopposed |
| | Independent | Thomas Masefield | unopposed |
South ward
| Affiliation | Candidate | Votes[8] | % |
| | Liberal–Labour | Albert Glover | 1,343 | 92.68 |
| | Liberal–Labour | John Thomas Julian | 1,081 | 74.60 |
| | Liberal–Labour | Arthur Rosser | 572 | 39.48 |
| | Independent | Thomas Tudehope | 567 | 39.13 |
| | Independent | Robert Farrell | 560 | 38.65 |
| Informal | 5 | 0.35 |
| Turnout | 1,449 | |
| Registered | 2,969 | |
Ponsoby ward
| Affiliation | Candidate | Votes[8] | % |
| | Liberal–Labour | James Parr | 897 | 93.83 |
| | Liberal–Labour | James Stichbury | 842 | 88.08 |
| | Independent | John Court | 802 | 83.89 |
| | Independent | John Beecroft | 318 | 33.26 |
| Informal | 9 | 0.94 |
| Turnout | 956 | |
| Registered | 2,015 | |
Grafton ward
| Affiliation | Candidate | Votes[8] | % |
| | Liberal–Labour | John Patterson | 813 | 68.96 |
| | Liberal–Labour | Henry Thomas Garralt | 711 | 60.31 |
| | Liberal–Labour | John William Hewson | 620 | 52.59 |
| | Independent | James Jamieson | 591 | 50.13 |
| | Independent | Maurice Casey | 537 | 45.55 |
| Informal | 14 | 1.19 |
| Turnout | 1,179 | |
| Registered | 2,081 | |
By-election
Kidd's election as mayor caused a vacancy. A by-election held in the Grafton ward on 21 August 1901 returned John McLeod as the new city councillor.[9]
Notes
- ^ Endorsed by Liberal–Labour
References
|
|---|
Elections (non-exhaustive) | | Counties | |
|---|
| Cities | |
|---|
| Boroughs | |
|---|
| Town districts | |
|---|
|
|---|
| Related articles | |
|---|
|