Birmingham Duddeston (UK Parliament constituency)

Birmingham Duddeston was a constituency of the House of Commons of the Parliament of the United Kingdom from 1918 to 1950. It elected one Member of Parliament (MP) by the first-past-the-post system of election.

Birmingham Duddeston
Former Borough constituency
for the House of Commons
19181950
SeatsOne
Created fromAston Manor
Replaced byBirmingham Small Heath and Birmingham Aston

Boundaries

The Representation of the People Act 1918 provided that the constituency was to consist of "Duddeston and Nechells Ward, St Mary's Ward (except the part thereof included in the Aston Division), and so much of the portion of Aston Ward which is not included in the Aston Division as lies to the west of the London and North Western Railway".[1]

On its abolition by the Representation of the People Act 1948, the Duddeston and Nechells Wards became part of the Small Heath constituency, and the St Mary's and Aston wards were transferred in their entirety to the Aston constituency.[2]

Members of Parliament

ElectionMemberParty
1918Eldred HallasCoalition NDP
1919Labour
1922Sir Ernest HileyConservative
1923John BurmanConservative
1929George Francis SawyerLabour
1931Sir Oliver SimmondsConservative
1945Edith WillsLabour Co-op
1950Constituency abolished

Election results

Election in the 1910s

General election 1918: Birmingham Duddeston[3]
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
CNational DemocraticEldred Hallas8,79679.41
LiberalJohn Frances Crowley2,28020.59
Majority6,51658.82
Turnout11,07632.42
Registered electors34,167
National Democratic win (new seat)
C indicates candidate endorsed by the coalition government.

Elections in the 1920s

General election 1922: Birmingham Duddeston[3]
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
UnionistErnest Hiley 13,091 61.11 New
LabourMichael Brothers8,33138.89New
Majority4,76022.22N/A
Turnout21,42262.29+29.87
Registered electors34,388
Unionist gain from Coalition National DemocraticSwingN/A
General election 1923: Birmingham Duddeston[3]
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
UnionistJohn Burman 11,712 59.58 −1.53
LabourGeorge Francis Sawyer7,30937.19−1.70
Free TradeA Ford6343.23New
Majority4,40322.39+0.17
Turnout19,65556.88−5.41
Registered electors34,553
Unionist holdSwing+0.09
General election 1924: Birmingham Duddeston[3]
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
UnionistJohn Burman 11,407 51.15 −8.43
LabourGeorge Francis Sawyer10,89248.85+11.66
Majority5152.30−20.09
Turnout22,29964.31+7.43
Registered electors34,673
Unionist holdSwing−10.05
General election 1929: Birmingham Duddeston[3]
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
LabourGeorge Francis Sawyer 18,204 61.00 +12.15
UnionistJohn Burman11,63939.00−12.15
Majority6,56522.00N/A
Turnout29,84368.59+4.28
Registered electors43,507
Labour gain from UnionistSwing+12.15

Elections in the 1930s

General election 1931: Birmingham Duddeston[3]
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
ConservativeOliver Simmonds 16,332 61.10 +22.10
LabourGeorge Francis Sawyer9,78936.62−24.38
CommunistBernard Moore[4]3271.22New
New PartyJessie Williams2841.06New
Majority6,54324.48N/A
Turnout26,73264.43−4.16
Registered electors41,492
Conservative gain from LabourSwing+23.24
General election 1935: Birmingham Duddeston[3]
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
ConservativeOliver Simmonds 12,146 57.76 −3.34
LabourGeorge Francis Sawyer8,88442.24+5.62
Majority3,26215.52−8.96
Turnout21,03053.72−10.71
Registered electors39,144
Conservative holdSwing−4.48

Election in the 1940s

General election 1945: Birmingham Duddeston[3]
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
Labour Co-opEdith Wills 10,745 64.98 +22.74
ConservativeOliver Simmonds5,79135.02−22.74
Majority4,95429.96N/A
Turnout16,53663.49+9.77
Registered electors26,047
Labour Co-op gain from ConservativeSwing+22.74

References