53°41′31″N 1°48′11″W / 53.692°N 1.803°W
Elland | |
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Former county constituency for the House of Commons | |
County | West Riding of Yorkshire |
Major settlements | Elland, Brighouse |
1885–1950 | |
Created from | Northern West Riding of Yorkshire |
Replaced by | Brighouse & Spenborough, Bradford South, Halifax and Sowerby |
Elland was a parliamentary constituency in the West Riding of Yorkshire that existed between 1885 and 1950. It elected one Member of Parliament (MP) to the House of Commons of the United Kingdom, by the first-past-the-post voting system.
Situated between Bradford in the North, Halifax in the West, and Huddersfield to the south, it included the mining town of Brighouse and the wool centre of Elland. With a sizeable Nonconformist population (estimated at 15 per cent in 1922), it was natural Liberal territory, and was a fairly safe Liberal and later Labour seat, falling to the Conservatives only in the 'khaki election' of 1918 and the Labour collapse of 1931. In the 1918 redistribution it lost some territory and it was abolished in 1950. A sizeable part of the area was transferred to the new Brighouse and Spenborough seat.