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Thomas Davey (New Zealand politician)

Thomas Davey
Portrait photo of Thomas Henry Davey, showing him with a bald head and a full beard
Thomas Davey
Member of the New Zealand Parliament
for City of Christchurch electorate
In office
1902–1905
Preceded by George John Smith
Succeeded by electorate abolished
Member of the New Zealand Parliament
for Christchurch East
In office
1905–1914
Preceded by new electorate
Succeeded by Henry Thacker
Personal details
Born 1856–
Liskeard
Died 1934
Political party Liberal
Spouse(s) Maude Davey (née Dobson)
Profession Printer

Thomas Henry Davey (1856 – 5 April 1934) was a New Zealand Member of Parliament for the electorates of City of Christchurch and Christchurch East. He is regarded as a member of the Liberal Party, but was critical of aspects of the party and its leadership.

Davey was born in Liskeard in south east Cornwall, England. He learned the trade of printing.

With his parents, he came to New Zealand in 1874, arriving in Wellington on the Douglass. They lived in Feilding (where he worked as a saw miller), Wellington (where he worked for the Government printer) and then Christchurch. He was a printer for the Lyttelton Times newspaper and became President of the Typographical Union and Vice-President of the Trades and Labour Council.

On 8 August 1884, he married Maude Davey, daughter of John Dobson (surveyor) from Oxford.

From between the general elections of 1902 and 1905, Davey was one of the three members of marliament representing the multi-member City of Christchurch electorate. He had been presented with a petition to stand for parliament and came third out of nine contenders in this three-member electorate, behind Tommy Taylor and Harry Ell.

In 1905, these multi-member electorates were split up, and he won the Christchurch East electorate against three other contenders: William Whitehouse Collins (who had previously been in Parliament for the Liberal Party), Henry Toogood (a young engineer who only recently left Canterbury College and who would become one of the founding members of the Institution of Professional Engineers New Zealand), and Frederick Cooke (a prominent member of the Socialist Party).


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