- List of Members
- References
The 46th New Brunswick Legislative Assembly represented New Brunswick between February 27, 1968, and September 3, 1970. Wallace Samuel Bird was Lieutenant-Governor of New Brunswick. Robert B. McCready was chosen as speaker. The Liberal Party led by Louis Robichaud formed the government. List of Members Electoral District | Name | Party |
---|
York | Harry Ames | Progressive Conservative | Carl Mooers | Progressive Conservative | Westmorland | Percy Mitton | Liberal | Joseph E. Leblanc | Liberal | W. Wynn Meldrum | Liberal | Cléophas Léger | Liberal | Kings | John B.M. Baxter | Progressive Conservative | George E. Horton | Progressive Conservative | Cyril B. Sherwood | Progressive Conservative | Queens | Robert B. McCready | Liberal | Wilfred Bishop | Progressive Conservative | Charlotte | John E. Rigby | Progressive Conservative | G. W. N. Cockburn | Progressive Conservative | Leland McGaw | Progressive Conservative | DeCosta Young | Progressive Conservative | Northumberland | Graham Crocker | Liberal | J. Fraser Kerr | Liberal | Clarence S. Menzies | Liberal | J. L. A. Savoie[1] Frank E. Kane (1969) | Liberal | Norbert Thériault | Liberal | Sunbury | William R. Duffie | Liberal | Douglas A. Flower | Liberal | Kent | Louis J. Robichaud | Liberal | André F. Richard | Liberal | Alan R. Graham | Liberal | Gloucester | Gérard Haché | Liberal | Ernest Richard | Liberal | J. Omer Boudreau | Liberal | Bernard A. Jean | Liberal | A. A. Ferguson | Liberal | Carleton | Richard B. Hatfield | Progressive Conservative | Fred A. McCain | Progressive Conservative | Edison Stairs | Progressive Conservative | Restigouche | Wilfred Sénéchal | Liberal | Raymond Doucett | Liberal | J. M. Joffre Daigle[2] J.C. Van Horne (1968) | Liberal Progressive Conservative | Albert | Claude D. Taylor | Progressive Conservative | Brenda Robertson | Progressive Conservative | Victoria | Leon B. Rideout | Progressive Conservative | J. Stewart Brooks | Progressive Conservative | Madawaska | Laurier Lévesque | Liberal | J. Adrien Lévesque | Liberal | Gérald Clavette | Liberal | Moncton | L.G. DesBrisay | Liberal | R. V. Lenihan | Liberal | Léonide H. Cyr | Liberal | Saint John Centre | J. Lorne McGuigan | Progressive Conservative | George E. McInerney | Progressive Conservative | Donald D. Patterson | Progressive Conservative | Robert J. Higgins | Liberal | Saint John East | C. A. McIlveen | Progressive Conservative | William J. Woodroffe | Progressive Conservative | Saint John West | Rodman Logan | Progressive Conservative | Bathurst | H. H. Williamson | Liberal | Campbellton | Lewis C. Ayles | Progressive Conservative | Edmundston | B. Fernand Nadeau | Liberal | Fredericton | George Everett Chalmers | Progressive Conservative | J. F. McInerney[3] Lawrence Garvie (1968) | Progressive Conservative |
Notes: 1. ^died in 1969 2. ^died in 1968 3. ^died in 1967
References - Canadian Parliamentary Guide, 1970, PG Normandin
{{s-start}}{{succession box| title=Legislative Assemblies of New Brunswick| before=45th New Brunswick Legislature | after=47th New Brunswick Legislature | years=1967–1970| }}{{s-end}} 4 : Terms of the New Brunswick Legislature|1967 establishments in New Brunswick|1970 disestablishments in New Brunswick|20th century in New Brunswick |