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The 30th New Brunswick Legislative Assembly represented New Brunswick between March 23, 1899, and February 5, 1903.
Abner Reid McClelan served as Lieutenant-Governor of New Brunswick until January 1902 when he was succeeded by Jabez Bunting Snowball.
C.W. Robinson was chosen as speaker.
The Liberal Party led by Henry Emmerson formed the government. Lemuel John Tweedie became party leader in 1907 when Emmerson entered federal politics.
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Electoral District
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Name
|
Party
|
First elected / previously elected
|
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Saint John County
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Albert T. Dunn
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Liberal
|
1892
|
|
John McLeod
|
Liberal
|
1892
|
|
Robert C. Ruddick (1902)
|
Independent
|
1902
|
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York
|
William T. Whitehead
|
Independent
|
1899
|
|
John A. Campbell
|
Independent
|
1899
|
|
Alexander Gibson[1]
|
Liberal
|
1899
|
|
Frederick P. Thompson
|
Liberal
|
1878, 1898
|
|
George W. Allen (1901)
|
Independent
|
1901
|
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Westmorland
|
William F. Humphrey
|
Independent
|
1899
|
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Clifford W. Robinson
|
Liberal
|
1897
|
|
Olivier-Maximin Melanson
|
Conservative
|
1890, 1899
|
|
W. Woodbury Wells[2]
|
Liberal
|
1892
|
|
Arthur B. Copp (1901)
|
Liberal
|
1901
|
|
Kings
|
George G. Scovil
|
Liberal
|
1892
|
|
Albert S. White
|
Liberal
|
1886
|
|
William Pugsley
|
Liberal
|
1885, 1899
|
|
Ora P. King (1902)
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Independent
|
1902
|
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Queens
|
Isaac W. Carpenter
|
Independent
|
1896
|
|
Laughlin P. Farris
|
Liberal
|
1892
|
|
Charlotte
|
William Frederick Todd
|
Liberal
|
1899
|
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George F. Hill
|
Liberal
|
1878, 1892
|
|
James Russell
|
Liberal
|
1886
|
|
James O'Brien
|
Liberal
|
1892
|
|
Northumberland
|
John P. Burchill
|
Liberal
|
1882, 1887
|
|
John O'Brien
|
Conservative
|
1890
|
|
Lemuel J. Tweedie
|
Liberal
|
1874, 1886
|
|
Charles E. Fish
|
Conservative
|
1899
|
|
Sunbury
|
Parker Glasier
|
Conservative
|
1899
|
|
John D. Hazen
|
Conservative
|
1899
|
|
Kent
|
Pierre H. Léger[3]
|
Conservative
|
1895
|
|
James Barnes
|
Liberal
|
1895
|
|
Urbain Johnson
|
Liberal
|
1869, 1874, 1895
|
|
Richard A. Poirier (1901)
|
Independent
|
1901
|
|
Gloucester
|
Peter J. Veniot[4]
|
Liberal
|
1894
|
|
Theobald M. Burns
|
Conservative
|
1899
|
|
Joseph Poirier
|
Conservative
|
1890, 1898
|
|
John Young (1899)
|
Independent
|
1899
|
|
Carleton
|
Charles L. Smith[5]
|
Liberal
|
1895
|
|
Hugh H. McCain
|
Liberal
|
1895
|
|
Frank B. Carvell[6]
|
Liberal
|
1899
|
|
James K. Fleming (1900)
|
Conservative
|
1900
|
|
Stephen B. Appleby (1900)
|
Liberal
|
1900
|
|
Restigouche
|
William A. Mott
|
Conservative
|
1892
|
|
Charles H. LaBillois
|
Conservative
|
1892
|
|
Albert
|
Henry Emmerson[1]
|
Liberal
|
1888, 1892
|
|
Charles J. Osman
|
Liberal
|
1897
|
|
Sanford S. Ryan (1900)
|
Independent
|
1900
|
|
Victoria
|
James E. Porter
|
Liberal
|
1890, 1895
|
|
Thomas Lawson
|
Independent
|
1899
|
|
Madawaska
|
Frederick LaForest
|
Liberal
|
1899
|
|
Narcisse A. Gagnon
|
Independent
|
1899
|
|
Saint John City
|
George Robertson
|
Independent
|
1899
|
|
Harrison A. McKeown
|
Conservative
|
1890, 1899
|
|
Daniel S. Purdy
|
Independent
|
1899
|
|
William Shaw
|
Conservative
|
1890
|
- ^ a b elected to federal seat
- ^ died in 1901
- ^ died in 1900
- ^ resigned to accept appointment
- ^ Appointed postmaster of Woodstock
- ^ Ran for federal seat
- General
- Canadian Parliamentary Guide, 1901, AJ Magurn