- List of Members
- References
The 42nd New Brunswick Legislative Assembly represented New Brunswick between February 11, 1953, and April 17, 1956. David Laurence MacLaren served as Lieutenant-Governor of New Brunswick. E. T. Kennedy was chosen as speaker in 1953. After Kennedy died, Walter Powers succeeded him as speaker in 1954. J. Arthur Moore became speaker in 1955 after Powers' death. The Progressive Conservative Party led by Hugh John Flemming defeated the Liberals to form the government. List of Members Electoral District | Name | Party |
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Saint John County | Arthur W. Carton | Progressive Conservative | Robert McAllister | Progressive Conservative | York | Harry Ames | Progressive Conservative | C. Weldon Lawrence | Progressive Conservative | John F. McInerney | Progressive Conservative | William J. West | Progressive Conservative | Westmorland | Donald C. Harper | Progressive Conservative | Joseph E. Leblanc | Liberal | Cléophas Léger | Liberal | Austin C. Taylor | Liberal | Kings | Cyril B. Sherwood | Progressive Conservative | Gordon L. Fairweather | Progressive Conservative | Elmore T. Kennedy [1] | Progressive Conservative | Queens | Wilfred Bishop | Progressive Conservative | J. Arthur Moore | Progressive Conservative | Charlotte | Norman Buchanan | Progressive Conservative | C. Douglas Everett | Progressive Conservative | Lorne B. Groom | Progressive Conservative | Vance R. Huntley | Progressive Conservative | Northumberland | William S. Anderson | Liberal | William J. Gallant | Liberal | Richard J. Gill | Liberal | H. S. Murray | Liberal | Sunbury | Paul Fearon | Progressive Conservative | Paul Mersereau | Progressive Conservative | Kent | Hugh A. Dysart | Liberal | Isaie Melanson | Liberal | Louis J. Robichaud | Liberal | Gloucester | J. André Doucet | Liberal | Joseph E. Connolly | Liberal | Frederick C. Young | Liberal | Michel Fournier | Liberal | Ernest Richard | Liberal | Carleton | Hugh J. Flemming | Progressive Conservative | Fred A. McCain | Progressive Conservative | Harrison Monteith | Progressive Conservative | Restigouche | Douglas Pettigrew | Progressive Conservative | Roger Pichette | Progressive Conservative | Fred Somers | Progressive Conservative | Albert | Everett Newcomb | Progressive Conservative | Claude D. Taylor | Progressive Conservative | Victoria | J. Stewart Brooks | Progressive Conservative | Walter V. Powers[2] | Progressive Conservative | Madawaska | William M. Bird | Progressive Conservative | Lucien Fortin | Progressive Conservative | Edgar Fournier | Progressive Conservative | Saint John City | Donald D. Patterson | Progressive Conservative | Arthur E. Skaling | Progressive Conservative | Fred Somers | Progressive Conservative | George E. McInerney | Progressive Conservative | Moncton | Joseph W. Bourgeois | Progressive Conservative | T. Babbitt Parlee | Progressive Conservative |
Notes: 1. ^died in 1953 2. ^died in 1954
References - Canadian Parliamentary Guide, 1956, PG Normandin
{{s-start}}{{succession box| title=Legislative Assemblies of New Brunswick| before=41st New Brunswick Legislature | after=43rd New Brunswick Legislature | years=1952–1956| }}{{s-end}} 4 : Terms of the New Brunswick Legislature|1952 establishments in New Brunswick|1956 disestablishments in New Brunswick|20th century in New Brunswick |