Queen's County Council (now Laois County Council) was created in 1899 under the Local Government (Ireland) Act 1898 and the first local elections for the county council, and the councils of the five rural districts within Queen's County, were held on 6 April 1899, simultaneous with elections in the other administrative counties.[2] The first Queen's County Council comprised 32 councillors serving a three-year term:
Councillors
Additional Queen's County councillors 1899[5]
| Type |
Rural district |
Name |
Notes
|
| RDC chairman |
Abbeyleix |
Arthur McMahon |
Not the Castletown district representative
|
| Athy No. 2 |
Thomas Timmins
|
| Carlow No. 2 |
Matthias McWey
|
| Mountmellick |
James Dunne
|
| Roscrea No. 3 |
Thomas Lowry
|
| Grand jury
|
—
|
Robert Cosby |
Of Stradbally Hall
|
| Henry Charles White |
Of "Charleville", Roscrea
|
| Edmund Dease
|
| Co-opted
|
—
|
James Joseph Aird |
Auctioneer and merchant in Maryborough; father of William Aird.[6]
|
| James Conroy
|
Results by district
Coolrain[7]
| Name |
Votes |
Notes
|
| Michael Fitzpatrick |
186 |
Labourers' support
|
| E. Conroy |
184 |
Catholic clergy support
|
| C. P. Hamilton |
24 |
|
References
(1898 ←) 1899 United Kingdom local elections (→ 1900) |
|---|
| County councils (Ireland) |
- Antrim
- Armagh
- Carlow
- Cavan
- Clare
- Cork County
- Donegal
- Down
- Dublin County
- Fermanagh
- Fingal
- Galway County
- Kerry
- Kildare
- Kilkenny
- King's
- Leitrim
- Limerick County
- Londonderry
- Longford
- Louth
- Mayo
- Meath
- Monaghan
- Roscommon
- Sligo County
- Tipperary
- Tyrone
- Waterford
- Westmeath
- Wexford
- Wicklow
|
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| Borough and district councils (Ireland) | |
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| Boroughs and district councils (Wales) | |
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| Boroughs and district councils (England) | |
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