List of United Kingdom MPs who only sat in the January–October 1924 Parliament

General elections to the House of Commons of the United Kingdom were held in December 1923 and again in in October 1924. There were 64 Members of the 1924 Parliament were not members of any preceding or following Parliament. Their tenure as MPs therefore lasted 275 days, making them among the shortest-serving MPs in history. Two members (both Liberal) did not offer themselves for re-election. The remainder (51 Liberal, 10 Labour, and one Conservative) were candidates for re-election but were not returned.

Retired

Two members first elected in 1923 retired in 1924:

  1. Robert Pilkington (Liberal, Keighley)
  2. William Edward Robinson (Liberal, Burslem)

Defeated

Sixty two members first elected in 1923 were defeated in 1924:

  1. Thomas Raven Ackroyd (Liberal, Manchester Moss Side)
  2. Ronald Wilberforce Allen (Liberal, Leicester South)
  3. Robert Alstead (Liberal, Altrincham)
  4. Robert Noton Barclay (Liberal, Manchester Exchange)
  5. John Wycliffe Black (Liberal, Harborough)
  6. Arthur Comyns Carr (Liberal, Islington East)
  7. Leonard Costello (Liberal, Huntingdonshire)
  8. Valentine Crittall (Labour, Maldon)
  9. George Maitland Lloyd Davies (Christian Pacifist/Labour, University of Wales)
  10. Stephen Roxby Dodds (Liberal, Wirral)
  11. John Freeman Dunn (Liberal, Hemel Hempstead)
  12. Hugh Ferguson (Conservative, Motherwell)
  13. Victor Harold Finney (Liberal, Hexham)
  14. Leonard Franklin (Liberal, Hackney Central)
  15. William Gorman (Liberal, Royton)
  16. John Harris (Liberal, Hackney North)
  17. Frederick Hindle (Liberal, Darwen)
  18. Arthur Hobhouse (Liberal, Wells)
  19. Frank Hodges (Labour, Lichfield)
  20. Henry Hogbin (Liberal, Battersea North)
  21. Robert Jackson (Labour, Ipswich)
  22. Dorothy Jewson (Labour, Norwich)
  23. Charles Sydney Jones (Liberal, Liverpool West Derby)
  24. Sir Robert Newbald Kay (Liberal, Elland)
  25. Thomas Keens (Liberal, Aylesbury)
  26. Frederick Joseph Laverack (Liberal, Brixton)
  27. Edward Lessing (Liberal, Abingdon)
  28. John Frederick Loverseed (Liberal, Sudbury)
  29. Eric Macfadyen (Liberal, Devizes)
  30. Henry Maden (Liberal, Lonsdale)
  31. Sir Courtenay Mansel, Bt. (Liberal, Penryn and Falmouth)
  32. William Henry Porteous Martin (Labour, Dunbartonshire)
  33. Hugh Meyler (Liberal, Blackpool)
  34. Robert MacGregor Mitchell (Liberal, Perth)
  35. William Ewart Morse (Liberal, Bridgwater)
  36. Hon. Hugh Moulton (Liberal, Salisbury)
  37. Ramsay Muir (Liberal, Rochdale)
  38. Frank Murrell (Liberal, Weston-super-Mare)
  39. Henry Nixon (Labour, The Wrekin)
  40. John Joseph O'Neill (Liberal, Lancaster)
  41. Frank Walter Raffety (Liberal, Bath)
  42. Cecil Beresford Ramage (Liberal, Newcastle upon Tyne West)
  43. Hugh Reynolds Rathbone (Liberal, Liverpool Wavertree)
  44. Thomas Atholl Robertson (Liberal, Finchley)
  45. Sydney Walter Robinson (Liberal, Chelmsford)
  46. Charles Royle (Liberal, Stockport)
  47. Charles Rudkin (Liberal, Chichester)
  48. Robert Spence (Labour, Berwickshire and Haddingtonshire)
  49. Sir Charles Walter Starmer (Liberal, Cleveland)
  50. Robert Strother Stewart (Liberal, Stockton-on-Tees)
  51. Innes Harold Stranger (Liberal, Newbury)
  52. Joseph Sunlight (Liberal, Shrewsbury)
  53. John Lincoln Tattersall (Liberal, Stalybridge and Hyde)
  54. Lady Terrington (Liberal, Wycombe)
  55. Piers Gilchrist Thompson (Liberal, Torquay)
  56. George Ward (Liberal, Bosworth)
  57. Arnold Williams (Liberal, Sowerby)
  58. Major Ronald Samuel Ainslie Williams (Liberal, Sevenoaks)
  59. Lieut.-Col. Thomas Williams (Labour, Kennington)
  60. Herbert Willison (Liberal, Nuneaton)
  61. George Woodwark (Liberal, King's Lynn)
  62. Andrew Young (Labour, Glasgow Partick)


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