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General elections were held in Jamaica under the Old Representative System between the 17th and 19th centuries. The first elections were held in 1677,[1] in which thirty-two members were elected from 15 constituencies.[2] The House of Assembly was abolished in 1865.[3]
Results
1677
| Constituency | Elected members | 
|---|---|
| Clarendon | Thomas Sutton, Jonathan Ashurst | 
| St. Andrew's | Samuel Barry, John Barnaby | 
| St. Ann's | Richard Hemmings, John Gawden | 
| St. David's | Thomas Ryves, Thomas Fargor | 
| St. Dorothy's | John Colebeck, Theodore Cary | 
| St. Elizabeth | Richard Scott, Thomas Raby | 
| St. George's | William Nedham, George Philipps | 
| St. James' | Richard Guy, Samuel Jenks | 
| St. John's | Whitgift Aylemore, Richard Oldfield | 
| St. Katherine's | John Bowden, Samuel Bernard, William Bragg | 
| St. Mary's | John Fountain, Andrew Orgill | 
| St. Thomas | Edward Stanton, Clem. Richardson | 
| St. Thomas-in-the-Vale | Fulke Rose, George Nedham | 
| Port Royal | William Beeston, Anthony Swimmer, Charles Morgan | 
| Vere | Andrew Knight, Andrew Langly | 
| Source: British History Online[2] | |
References
- ↑ Myron Weiner & Ergun Özbudun (1897) Competitive Elections in Developing Countries Duke University Press, p190
- 1 2 America and West Indies: September 1677 British History Online
- ↑ History Library of Congress Country Studies
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