Hackney North in London 1885-1918 Hackney North in London 1918-50 Hackney North  was a parliamentary constituency  in "The Metropolis" (later the  County of London ). It returned one Member of Parliament  (MP)  to the House of Commons  of the Parliament of the United Kingdom . 
 
History  Elections have been held here since Simon de Montfort's Parliament  in 1265 for the county constituency  of Middlesex . 
Under the Reform Act 1832  and from then onward, Hackney  formed part of the new parliamentary borough  of Tower Hamlets . This much larger area than today's borough with that name was only divided with the creation of the two seat constituency of Hackney  at the 1868 general election , comprising the large parishes  of Bethnal Green  and Shoreditch .[ 1] Representation of the People Act 1867 . Hackney's increased democratic representation provided suffrage for the first time to working-class men but was originally intended to increase the number of seats held in the House of Commons by the Conservative Party . 
The constituency was created under the Redistribution of Seats Act 1885  when the two-member Parliamentary Borough of Hackney  was split into three single-member divisions. The seat, officially the Northern Division of the Parliamentary Borough of Hackney  was first contested at the 1885 general election . The constituency was abolished under the Representation of the People Act 1948  for the 1950 general election , when it was largely replaced by the new Hackney North and Stoke Newington  constituency. 
 
Boundaries  
In 1885 the constituency was defined as consisting of: 
  
The Representation of the People Act 1918  redrew constituencies throughout Great Britain and Ireland . Seats in the County of London  were redefined in terms of wards of the Metropolitan Boroughs  that had been created in 1900 . The Metropolitan Borough of Hackney  was divided into three divisions, with the same names as the constituencies created in 1885. Hackney North was defined as consisting of : 
 Stamford Hill Ward  The part of Clapton Park Ward to the north of a line drawn along the centres of Glenarm Road, Glyn Road and Redwald Road to its junction with Maclaren Street, thence across the recreation grounds in Daubeney Road to the borough boundary at a point fifty feet north of a boundary post situate at the junction of the Waterworks River with the River Lea at Lead Mill Point.  The part of West Hackney Ward to the north and west of the centre of Shacklewell Lane.[ 3]  Stoke Newington was removed from the seat, and became a separate constituency .[ 3] 
 
Redistribution  The constituency was abolished by the Representation of the People Act 1948. The Borough of Hackney and Stoke Newington  jointly formed two seats, Stoke Newington and Hackney North and Hackney South .  The bulk of Hackney North passed to the Stoke Newington and Hackney North seat. 
 
Members of Parliament   
Elections  
Elections in the 1880s    
Elections in the 1890s  Bousfield 
Elections in the 1900s   Hart-Davies 
Elections in the 1910s  Greene 
Elections in the 1920s   Hobbis Harris 
Elections in the 1930s    
Elections in the 1940s   
References     ^ Representation of the People Act 1867, Schedule C, New Boroughs formed by Division of the Borough of the Tower Hamlets   ^ Redistribution of Seats Act, 1885, C. 23., Sixth Schedule, Divisions of boroughs. Number, names, contents, and boundaries of divisions.   ^ a b   Representation of the People Act 1918 c.64, Ninth Schedule: Redistribution of Seats   ^ a b c d e f g   Craig, FWS, ed. (1974). British Parliamentary Election Results: 1885-1918 . London: Macmillan Press. ISBN  9781349022984 . ^ "Election Intelligence. North Hackney-Result". The Times  ^ "The General Election. The Polls". The Times  ^ "Progress Of The General Election". The Times  ^ "Progress Of The General Election". The Times  ^ British parliamentary election results, 1918-1949 by FWS Craig  ^ "The General Election: First Returns, Polling In The Boroughs, Liberal Gains". The Times  ^ "The General Election: First Returns, Polling In The Boroughs". The Times  ^ "The General Election: First Returns, Polling In The Boroughs". The Times  ^ "The General Election: First Returns, Polling In The Boroughs". The Times  ^ "UK general election results 1945" . Political Science Resources . University of Keele . Archived from the original  on 7 January 2008. Retrieved 25 April  2009 .