Maple Creek (provincial electoral district)
Encyclopedia
Maple Creek is a former provincial electoral district for the Legislative Assembly
of the province of Saskatchewan
, Canada
. This district was one of 25 created for the 1st Saskatchewan general election
in 1905. It was dissolved and merged with part of the Shaunavon
riding before the 23rd Saskatchewan general election
in 1995 to form the constituency of Cypress Hills
.
A federal electoral district
in the same area existed from 1914 to 1953.
|style="width: 130px"|Provincial Rights
|David James Wylie
|align="right"|555
|align="right"|55.78%
|align="right"|–
|Liberal
|John Dixon
|align="right"|440
|align="right"|44.22%
|align="right"|–
|- bgcolor="white"
!align="left" colspan=3|Total
!align="right"|995
!align="right"|100.00%
!align="right"|
|-
|style="width: 130px"|Provincial Rights
|David James Wylie
|align="right"|613
|align="right"|66.78%
|align="right"|+11.00
|Liberal
|William Richard Abbott
|align="right"|305
|align="right"|33.22%
|align="right"|-11.00
|- bgcolor="white"
!align="left" colspan=3|Total
!align="right"|918
!align="right"|100.00%
!align="right"|
|-
|style="width: 130px"|Conservative
|David James Wylie
|align="right"|669
|align="right"|57.62%
|align="right"|-9.16
|Liberal
|N.L. Robson
|align="right"|492
|align="right"|42.38%
|align="right"|+9.16
|- bgcolor="white"
!align="left" colspan=3|Total
!align="right"|1,161
!align="right"|100.00%
!align="right"|
|-
|style="width: 130px"|Liberal
|Alexander John Colquhoun
|align="right"|2,229
|align="right"|53.41%
|align="right"|+11.03
|Conservative
|David James Wylie
|align="right"|1,944
|align="right"|46.59%
|align="right"|-11.03
|- bgcolor="white"
!align="left" colspan=3|Total
!align="right"|4,173
!align="right"|100.00%
!align="right"|
|-
|style="width: 130px"|Liberal
|Peter Lawrence Hyde
|align="right"|1,910
|align="right"|59.89%
|align="right"|+6.48
|Independent
|David Stuart Horne
|align="right"|1,279
|align="right"|40.11%
|align="right"|–
|- bgcolor="white"
!align="left" colspan=3|Total
!align="right"|3,189
!align="right"|100.00%
!align="right"|
|-
|style="width: 130px"|Liberal
|Peter Lawrence Hyde
|align="right"|Acclaimed
|align="right"|100.00%
|- bgcolor="white"
!align="left" colspan=3|Total
!align="right"|Acclamation
!align="right"|
|-
|style="width: 130px"|Liberal
|George Spence
|align="right"|1,476
|align="right"|74.62%
|align="right"|-
|Progressive
|Charles Frederick Colburn
|align="right"|502
|align="right"|25.38%
|align="right"|–
|- bgcolor="white"
!align="left" colspan=3|Total
!align="right"|1,978
!align="right"|100.00%
!align="right"|
|-
|style="width: 130px"|Liberal
|George Spence
|align="right"|2,104
|align="right"|53.09%
|align="right"|-21.53
|Independent
|David Stuart Horne
|align="right"|1,859
|align="right"|46.91%
|align="right"|-
|- bgcolor="white"
!align="left" colspan=3|Total
!align="right"|3,963
!align="right"|100.00%
!align="right"|
|-
|style="width: 130px"|Liberal
|John Mildenberger
|align="right"|3,114
|align="right"|51.57%
|align="right"|-1.52
|Conservative
|James McDougald
|align="right"|1,784
|align="right"|29.55%
|align="right"|-
|Farmer-Labour
|Jacob James Hubening
|align="right"|1,140
|align="right"|18.88%
|align="right"|–
|- bgcolor="white"
!align="left" colspan=3|Total
!align="right"|6,038
!align="right"|100.00%
!align="right"|
|-
|style="width: 130px"|Liberal
|John Mildenberger
|align="right"|4,058
|align="right"|52.32%
|align="right"|+0.75
|Social Credit
|Oliver Reid
|align="right"|2,136
|align="right"|27.54%
|align="right"|–
|Unity
|A.J. Mercer
|align="right"|1,562
|align="right"|20.14%
|align="right"|–
|- bgcolor="white"
!align="left" colspan=3|Total
!align="right"|7,756
!align="right"|100.00%
!align="right"|
|-
|style="width: 130px"|CCF
|Beatrice Trew
|align="right"|3,656
|align="right"|49.15%
|align="right"|-
|Liberal
|John Mildenberger
|align="right"|2,872
|align="right"|38.61%
|align="right"|-13.71
|Prog. Conservative
|George C. Stewart
|align="right"|911
|align="right"|12.24%
|align="right"|-
|- bgcolor="white"
!align="left" colspan=3|Total
!align="right"|7,439
!align="right"|100.00%
!align="right"|
|-
|style="width: 130px"|Liberal
|Alex Cameron
|align="right"|2,920
|align="right"|36.50%
|align="right"|-2.11
|CCF
|Beatrice Trew
|align="right"|2,590
|align="right"|32.37%
|align="right"|-16.78
|Social Credit
|A.J. Miller
|align="right"|2,491
|align="right"|31.13%
|align="right"|-
|- bgcolor="white"
!align="left" colspan=3|Total
!align="right"|8,001
!align="right"|100.00%
!align="right"|
|-
|style="width: 130px"|Liberal
|Alex Cameron
|align="right"|3,671
|align="right"|52.73%
|align="right"|+16.23
|CCF
|Walter Melrose
|align="right"|3,291
|align="right"|47.27%
|align="right"|+14.90
|- bgcolor="white"
!align="left" colspan=3|Total
!align="right"|6,962
!align="right"|100.00%
!align="right"|
|-
|style="width: 130px"|Liberal
|Alex Cameron
|align="right"|2,777
|align="right"|36.68%
|align="right"|-16.05
|CCF
|Les G. Benjamin
|align="right"|2,511
|align="right"|33.16%
|align="right"|-14.11
|Social Credit
|W. Alex Herle
|align="right"|2,284
|align="right"|30.16%
|align="right"|-
|- bgcolor="white"
!align="left" colspan=3|Total
!align="right"|7,572
!align="right"|100.00%
!align="right"|
|-
|style="width: 130px"|Liberal
|Alex Cameron
|align="right"|3,086
|align="right"|43.19%
|align="right"|+6.51
|CCF
|Les G. Benjamin
|align="right"|2,360
|align="right"|33.02%
|align="right"|-0.14
|Social Credit
|Morris Reis
|align="right"|1,000
|align="right"|13.99%
|align="right"|-16.17
|Progressive Conservative
|Marlyn K. Clary
|align="right"|700
|align="right"|9.80%
|align="right"|-
|- bgcolor="white"
!align="left" colspan=3|Total
!align="right"|7,146
!align="right"|100.00%
!align="right"|
|-
|style="width: 130px"|Liberal
|Alex Cameron
|align="right"|2,977
|align="right"|43.84%
|align="right"|+0.65
|CCF
|William P. Rolick
|align="right"|2,424
|align="right"|35.70%
|align="right"|+2.68
|Progressive Conservative
|Marlyn K. Clary
|align="right"|1,389
|align="right"|20.46%
|align="right"|+10.66
|- bgcolor="white"
!align="left" colspan=3|Total
!align="right"|6,790
!align="right"|100.00%
!align="right"|
|-
|style="width: 130px"|Liberal
|Alex Cameron
|align="right"|2,683
|align="right"|48.44%
|align="right"|+4.60
|NDP
|Ernie Howes
|align="right"|1,901
|align="right"|34.32%
|align="right"|-1.38
|Progressive Conservative
|Marlyn K. Clary
|align="right"|955
|align="right"|17.24%
|align="right"|-3.22
|- bgcolor="white"
!align="left" colspan=3|Total
!align="right"|5,539
!align="right"|100.00%
!align="right"|
|-
|style="width: 130px"|NDP
|Gene Flasch
|align="right"|2,858
|align="right"|47.84%
|align="right"|+13.52
|Liberal
|Alex Cameron
|align="right"|2,412
|align="right"|40.38%
|align="right"|-8.06
|Progressive Conservative
|Marlyn K. Clary
|align="right"|704
|align="right"|11.78%
|align="right"|-5.46
|- bgcolor="white"
!align="left" colspan=3|Total
!align="right"|5,974
!align="right"|100.00%
!align="right"|
|-
|style="width: 130px"|Liberal
|Bill Stodalka
|align="right"|2,698
|align="right"|37.62%
|align="right"|-2.76
|Progressive Conservative
|Eric Richardson
|align="right"|2,241
|align="right"|31.25%
|align="right"|+19.47
|NDP
|Gene Flasch
|align="right"|2,232
|align="right"|31.13%
|align="right"|-16.71
|- bgcolor="white"
!align="left" colspan=3|Total
!align="right"|7,171
!align="right"|100.00%
!align="right"|
|-
|style="width: 130px"|Progressive Conservative
|Joan Duncan
|align="right"|3,496
|align="right"|48.80%
|align="right"|+17.55
|NDP
|Norman Arndt
|align="right"|2,327
|align="right"|32.48%
|align="right"|+1.35
|Liberal
|W.V. (Fred) Deis
|align="right"|1,341
|align="right"|18.72%
|align="right"|-18.90
|- bgcolor="white"
!align="left" colspan=3|Total
!align="right"|7,164
!align="right"|100.00%
!align="right"|
|-
|style="width: 130px"|Progressive Conservative
|Joan Duncan
|align="right"|4,228
|align="right"|55.53%
|align="right"|+6.73
|NDP
|J.R. Porter
|align="right"|2,158
|align="right"|28.34%
|align="right"|-4.14
|Western Canada Concept
|Larry English
|align="right"|806
|align="right"|10.59%
|align="right"|–
|Liberal
|Bernie Ford
|align="right"|422
|align="right"|5.54%
|align="right"|-13.18
|- bgcolor="white"
!align="left" colspan=3|Total
!align="right"|7,614
!align="right"|100.00%
!align="right"|
|-
|style="width: 130px"|Progressive Conservative
|Joan Duncan
|align="right"|4,199
|align="right"|60.87%
|align="right"|+5.34
|NDP
|Barry Elderkin
|align="right"|2,185
|align="right"|31.68%
|align="right"|+3.34
|Liberal
|Harold Pawlitza
|align="right"|514
|align="right"|7.45%
|align="right"|+1.91
|- bgcolor="white"
!align="left" colspan=3|Total
!align="right"|6,898
!align="right"|100.00%
!align="right"|
|-
|style="width: 130px"|Prog. Conservative
|Jack Goohsen
|align="right"|2,627
|align="right"|40.55%
|align="right"|-20.32
|NDP
|Bryan Oster
|align="right"|1,987
|align="right"|30.67%
|align="right"|-1.01
|Liberal
|Shirley Helmerson
|align="right"|1,865
|align="right"|28.78%
|align="right"|+21.33
|- bgcolor="white"
!align="left" colspan=3|Total
!align="right"|6,479
!align="right"|100.00%
!align="right"|
Legislative Assembly of Saskatchewan
The 25th Legislative Assembly of Saskatchewan was in power from 2003 until November 20, 2007. It was controlled by the Saskatchewan New Democratic Party under premier Lorne Calvert.-Members:-By-elections:...
of the province of Saskatchewan
Saskatchewan
Saskatchewan is a prairie province in Canada, which has an area of . Saskatchewan is bordered on the west by Alberta, on the north by the Northwest Territories, on the east by Manitoba, and on the south by the U.S. states of Montana and North Dakota....
, Canada
Canada
Canada is a North American country consisting of ten provinces and three territories. Located in the northern part of the continent, it extends from the Atlantic Ocean in the east to the Pacific Ocean in the west, and northward into the Arctic Ocean...
. This district was one of 25 created for the 1st Saskatchewan general election
Saskatchewan general election, 1905
The Saskatchewan general election of 1905 was the first provincial election in the newly created Canadian province of Saskatchewan. It was held on 13 December 1905 to elect members of the Legislative Assembly of Saskatchewan. Walter Scott led the Liberal Party of Saskatchewan to victory over the...
in 1905. It was dissolved and merged with part of the Shaunavon
Shaunavon (electoral district)
Shaunavon is a former provincial electoral district for the Legislative Assembly of the province of Saskatchewan, Canada. This district was created before the 8th Saskatchewan general election in 1934 as "Gull Lake"...
riding before the 23rd Saskatchewan general election
Saskatchewan general election, 1995
The Saskatchewan general election of 1995 was the twenty-third provincial election held in the Canadian province of Saskatchewan. It was held on June 21, 1995 to elect members of the Legislative Assembly of Saskatchewan....
in 1995 to form the constituency of Cypress Hills
Cypress Hills (electoral district)
Cypress Hills is a provincial electoral district for the Legislative Assembly of Saskatchewan, Canada. Located in the extreme southwest corner of the province, this constituency was formed by the Representation Act, 1994 through combining the districts of Shaunavon, Maple Creek, and portions of...
.
A federal electoral district
Maple Creek (electoral district)
Maple Creek was a federal electoral district in Saskatchewan, Canada, that was represented in the Canadian House of Commons from 1917 to 1953. This riding was created in 1914 from parts of Moose Jaw riding....
in the same area existed from 1914 to 1953.
Members of the Legislative Assembly
|MLA | |Party |
1. | David James Wylie | 1905 – 1917 | Provincial Rights Provincial Rights Party The Provincial Rights Party was a Canadian political party founded and led by Frederick W.A.G. Haultain in 1905 to contest elections in the new province of Saskatchewan.Haultain had been Premier of the North-West Territories prior to the province's creation... , Conservative |
2. | Alexander John Colquhoun | 1917 – 1921 | Liberal |
3. | Peter Lawrence Hyde | 1921 – Dec. 1927 |
Liberal |
4. | George Spence | 1928 – 1934 | Liberal |
5. | John Mildenberger | 1934 – 1944 | Liberal |
6. | Beatrice Trew Beatrice Trew Beatrice Janet Trew was born on December 4, 1897, in Coates Mills, New Brunswick. She received teacher training in Fredericton and moved to a school at Manor, Saskatchewan in 1917. The following year she taught at Lemsford, where she met and married J. Albert Trew, a district farmer... |
1944 – 1948 | CCF Saskatchewan New Democratic Party The Saskatchewan New Democratic Party is a social-democratic political party in the Canadian province of Saskatchewan. It currently forms the official opposition, but has been a dominant force in Saskatchewan politics since the 1940s... |
7. | Alex Cameron | 1948 – 1971 | Liberal |
8. | Gene Flasch | 1971 – 1975 | New Democrat |
9. | Bill Stodalka | 1975 – 1978 | Liberal |
10. | Joan Duncan | 1978 – 1991 | Progressive Conservative |
11. | Jack Goohsen | 1991 – 1995 | Progressive Conservative Progressive Conservative Party of Saskatchewan The Progressive Conservative Party of Saskatchewan is a right-of-centre political party in the Canadian province of Saskatchewan. Prior to 1942, it was known as the Conservative Party of Saskatchewan. Members are commonly known as Tories.... |
---|
Election results
|-|style="width: 130px"|Provincial Rights
Provincial Rights Party
The Provincial Rights Party was a Canadian political party founded and led by Frederick W.A.G. Haultain in 1905 to contest elections in the new province of Saskatchewan.Haultain had been Premier of the North-West Territories prior to the province's creation...
|David James Wylie
|align="right"|555
|align="right"|55.78%
|align="right"|–
|Liberal
|John Dixon
|align="right"|440
|align="right"|44.22%
|align="right"|–
|- bgcolor="white"
!align="left" colspan=3|Total
!align="right"|995
!align="right"|100.00%
!align="right"|
|-
|style="width: 130px"|Provincial Rights
Provincial Rights Party
The Provincial Rights Party was a Canadian political party founded and led by Frederick W.A.G. Haultain in 1905 to contest elections in the new province of Saskatchewan.Haultain had been Premier of the North-West Territories prior to the province's creation...
|David James Wylie
|align="right"|613
|align="right"|66.78%
|align="right"|+11.00
|Liberal
|William Richard Abbott
|align="right"|305
|align="right"|33.22%
|align="right"|-11.00
|- bgcolor="white"
!align="left" colspan=3|Total
!align="right"|918
!align="right"|100.00%
!align="right"|
|-
|style="width: 130px"|Conservative
|David James Wylie
|align="right"|669
|align="right"|57.62%
|align="right"|-9.16
|Liberal
|N.L. Robson
|align="right"|492
|align="right"|42.38%
|align="right"|+9.16
|- bgcolor="white"
!align="left" colspan=3|Total
!align="right"|1,161
!align="right"|100.00%
!align="right"|
|-
|style="width: 130px"|Liberal
|Alexander John Colquhoun
|align="right"|2,229
|align="right"|53.41%
|align="right"|+11.03
|Conservative
|David James Wylie
|align="right"|1,944
|align="right"|46.59%
|align="right"|-11.03
|- bgcolor="white"
!align="left" colspan=3|Total
!align="right"|4,173
!align="right"|100.00%
!align="right"|
|-
|style="width: 130px"|Liberal
|Peter Lawrence Hyde
|align="right"|1,910
|align="right"|59.89%
|align="right"|+6.48
|Independent
Independent (politician)
In politics, an independent or non-party politician is an individual not affiliated to any political party. Independents may hold a centrist viewpoint between those of major political parties, a viewpoint more extreme than any major party, or they may have a viewpoint based on issues that they do...
|David Stuart Horne
|align="right"|1,279
|align="right"|40.11%
|align="right"|–
|- bgcolor="white"
!align="left" colspan=3|Total
!align="right"|3,189
!align="right"|100.00%
!align="right"|
|-
|style="width: 130px"|Liberal
|Peter Lawrence Hyde
|align="right"|Acclaimed
|align="right"|100.00%
|- bgcolor="white"
!align="left" colspan=3|Total
!align="right"|Acclamation
!align="right"|
|-
|style="width: 130px"|Liberal
|George Spence
|align="right"|1,476
|align="right"|74.62%
|align="right"|-
|Progressive
Progressive Party of Saskatchewan
The Progressive Party of Saskatchewan was a provincial section of the Progressive Party of Canada and was active from the 1920s to the mid-1930s...
|Charles Frederick Colburn
|align="right"|502
|align="right"|25.38%
|align="right"|–
|- bgcolor="white"
!align="left" colspan=3|Total
!align="right"|1,978
!align="right"|100.00%
!align="right"|
|-
|style="width: 130px"|Liberal
|George Spence
|align="right"|2,104
|align="right"|53.09%
|align="right"|-21.53
|Independent
Independent (politician)
In politics, an independent or non-party politician is an individual not affiliated to any political party. Independents may hold a centrist viewpoint between those of major political parties, a viewpoint more extreme than any major party, or they may have a viewpoint based on issues that they do...
|David Stuart Horne
|align="right"|1,859
|align="right"|46.91%
|align="right"|-
|- bgcolor="white"
!align="left" colspan=3|Total
!align="right"|3,963
!align="right"|100.00%
!align="right"|
|-
|style="width: 130px"|Liberal
|John Mildenberger
|align="right"|3,114
|align="right"|51.57%
|align="right"|-1.52
|Conservative
Progressive Conservative Party of Saskatchewan
The Progressive Conservative Party of Saskatchewan is a right-of-centre political party in the Canadian province of Saskatchewan. Prior to 1942, it was known as the Conservative Party of Saskatchewan. Members are commonly known as Tories....
|James McDougald
|align="right"|1,784
|align="right"|29.55%
|align="right"|-
|Farmer-Labour
Saskatchewan New Democratic Party
The Saskatchewan New Democratic Party is a social-democratic political party in the Canadian province of Saskatchewan. It currently forms the official opposition, but has been a dominant force in Saskatchewan politics since the 1940s...
|Jacob James Hubening
|align="right"|1,140
|align="right"|18.88%
|align="right"|–
|- bgcolor="white"
!align="left" colspan=3|Total
!align="right"|6,038
!align="right"|100.00%
!align="right"|
|-
|style="width: 130px"|Liberal
|John Mildenberger
|align="right"|4,058
|align="right"|52.32%
|align="right"|+0.75
|Social Credit
Social Credit Party of Saskatchewan
The Social Credit Party of Saskatchewan was a political party in the Canadian province of Saskatchewan that promoted social credit economic theories from the mid-1930s to the mid-1970s....
|Oliver Reid
|align="right"|2,136
|align="right"|27.54%
|align="right"|–
|Unity
Unity (Canada)
Unity or Progressive Unity was the name used in Saskatchewan, Canada, by a popular front party initiated by the Communist Party of Canada for the 1938 Saskatchewan and 1940 Canadian election....
|A.J. Mercer
|align="right"|1,562
|align="right"|20.14%
|align="right"|–
|- bgcolor="white"
!align="left" colspan=3|Total
!align="right"|7,756
!align="right"|100.00%
!align="right"|
|-
|style="width: 130px"|CCF
Saskatchewan New Democratic Party
The Saskatchewan New Democratic Party is a social-democratic political party in the Canadian province of Saskatchewan. It currently forms the official opposition, but has been a dominant force in Saskatchewan politics since the 1940s...
|Beatrice Trew
Beatrice Trew
Beatrice Janet Trew was born on December 4, 1897, in Coates Mills, New Brunswick. She received teacher training in Fredericton and moved to a school at Manor, Saskatchewan in 1917. The following year she taught at Lemsford, where she met and married J. Albert Trew, a district farmer...
|align="right"|3,656
|align="right"|49.15%
|align="right"|-
|Liberal
|John Mildenberger
|align="right"|2,872
|align="right"|38.61%
|align="right"|-13.71
|Prog. Conservative
|George C. Stewart
|align="right"|911
|align="right"|12.24%
|align="right"|-
|- bgcolor="white"
!align="left" colspan=3|Total
!align="right"|7,439
!align="right"|100.00%
!align="right"|
|-
|style="width: 130px"|Liberal
|Alex Cameron
|align="right"|2,920
|align="right"|36.50%
|align="right"|-2.11
|CCF
Saskatchewan New Democratic Party
The Saskatchewan New Democratic Party is a social-democratic political party in the Canadian province of Saskatchewan. It currently forms the official opposition, but has been a dominant force in Saskatchewan politics since the 1940s...
|Beatrice Trew
Beatrice Trew
Beatrice Janet Trew was born on December 4, 1897, in Coates Mills, New Brunswick. She received teacher training in Fredericton and moved to a school at Manor, Saskatchewan in 1917. The following year she taught at Lemsford, where she met and married J. Albert Trew, a district farmer...
|align="right"|2,590
|align="right"|32.37%
|align="right"|-16.78
|Social Credit
Social Credit Party of Saskatchewan
The Social Credit Party of Saskatchewan was a political party in the Canadian province of Saskatchewan that promoted social credit economic theories from the mid-1930s to the mid-1970s....
|A.J. Miller
|align="right"|2,491
|align="right"|31.13%
|align="right"|-
|- bgcolor="white"
!align="left" colspan=3|Total
!align="right"|8,001
!align="right"|100.00%
!align="right"|
|-
|style="width: 130px"|Liberal
|Alex Cameron
|align="right"|3,671
|align="right"|52.73%
|align="right"|+16.23
|CCF
Saskatchewan New Democratic Party
The Saskatchewan New Democratic Party is a social-democratic political party in the Canadian province of Saskatchewan. It currently forms the official opposition, but has been a dominant force in Saskatchewan politics since the 1940s...
|Walter Melrose
|align="right"|3,291
|align="right"|47.27%
|align="right"|+14.90
|- bgcolor="white"
!align="left" colspan=3|Total
!align="right"|6,962
!align="right"|100.00%
!align="right"|
|-
|style="width: 130px"|Liberal
|Alex Cameron
|align="right"|2,777
|align="right"|36.68%
|align="right"|-16.05
|CCF
Saskatchewan New Democratic Party
The Saskatchewan New Democratic Party is a social-democratic political party in the Canadian province of Saskatchewan. It currently forms the official opposition, but has been a dominant force in Saskatchewan politics since the 1940s...
|Les G. Benjamin
Les Benjamin
Leslie Gordon Benjamin was a Canadian Member of Parliament. Benjamin was first elected to the Canadian House of Commons in 1968 as a New Democratic Party MP from Saskatchewan...
|align="right"|2,511
|align="right"|33.16%
|align="right"|-14.11
|Social Credit
Social Credit Party of Saskatchewan
The Social Credit Party of Saskatchewan was a political party in the Canadian province of Saskatchewan that promoted social credit economic theories from the mid-1930s to the mid-1970s....
|W. Alex Herle
|align="right"|2,284
|align="right"|30.16%
|align="right"|-
|- bgcolor="white"
!align="left" colspan=3|Total
!align="right"|7,572
!align="right"|100.00%
!align="right"|
|-
|style="width: 130px"|Liberal
|Alex Cameron
|align="right"|3,086
|align="right"|43.19%
|align="right"|+6.51
|CCF
Saskatchewan New Democratic Party
The Saskatchewan New Democratic Party is a social-democratic political party in the Canadian province of Saskatchewan. It currently forms the official opposition, but has been a dominant force in Saskatchewan politics since the 1940s...
|Les G. Benjamin
Les Benjamin
Leslie Gordon Benjamin was a Canadian Member of Parliament. Benjamin was first elected to the Canadian House of Commons in 1968 as a New Democratic Party MP from Saskatchewan...
|align="right"|2,360
|align="right"|33.02%
|align="right"|-0.14
|Social Credit
Social Credit Party of Saskatchewan
The Social Credit Party of Saskatchewan was a political party in the Canadian province of Saskatchewan that promoted social credit economic theories from the mid-1930s to the mid-1970s....
|Morris Reis
|align="right"|1,000
|align="right"|13.99%
|align="right"|-16.17
|Progressive Conservative
|Marlyn K. Clary
|align="right"|700
|align="right"|9.80%
|align="right"|-
|- bgcolor="white"
!align="left" colspan=3|Total
!align="right"|7,146
!align="right"|100.00%
!align="right"|
|-
|style="width: 130px"|Liberal
|Alex Cameron
|align="right"|2,977
|align="right"|43.84%
|align="right"|+0.65
|CCF
Saskatchewan New Democratic Party
The Saskatchewan New Democratic Party is a social-democratic political party in the Canadian province of Saskatchewan. It currently forms the official opposition, but has been a dominant force in Saskatchewan politics since the 1940s...
|William P. Rolick
|align="right"|2,424
|align="right"|35.70%
|align="right"|+2.68
|Progressive Conservative
|Marlyn K. Clary
|align="right"|1,389
|align="right"|20.46%
|align="right"|+10.66
|- bgcolor="white"
!align="left" colspan=3|Total
!align="right"|6,790
!align="right"|100.00%
!align="right"|
|-
|style="width: 130px"|Liberal
|Alex Cameron
|align="right"|2,683
|align="right"|48.44%
|align="right"|+4.60
|NDP
|Ernie Howes
|align="right"|1,901
|align="right"|34.32%
|align="right"|-1.38
|Progressive Conservative
|Marlyn K. Clary
|align="right"|955
|align="right"|17.24%
|align="right"|-3.22
|- bgcolor="white"
!align="left" colspan=3|Total
!align="right"|5,539
!align="right"|100.00%
!align="right"|
|-
|style="width: 130px"|NDP
|Gene Flasch
|align="right"|2,858
|align="right"|47.84%
|align="right"|+13.52
|Liberal
|Alex Cameron
|align="right"|2,412
|align="right"|40.38%
|align="right"|-8.06
|Progressive Conservative
|Marlyn K. Clary
|align="right"|704
|align="right"|11.78%
|align="right"|-5.46
|- bgcolor="white"
!align="left" colspan=3|Total
!align="right"|5,974
!align="right"|100.00%
!align="right"|
|-
|style="width: 130px"|Liberal
|Bill Stodalka
|align="right"|2,698
|align="right"|37.62%
|align="right"|-2.76
|Progressive Conservative
|Eric Richardson
|align="right"|2,241
|align="right"|31.25%
|align="right"|+19.47
|NDP
|Gene Flasch
|align="right"|2,232
|align="right"|31.13%
|align="right"|-16.71
|- bgcolor="white"
!align="left" colspan=3|Total
!align="right"|7,171
!align="right"|100.00%
!align="right"|
|-
|style="width: 130px"|Progressive Conservative
|Joan Duncan
|align="right"|3,496
|align="right"|48.80%
|align="right"|+17.55
|NDP
|Norman Arndt
|align="right"|2,327
|align="right"|32.48%
|align="right"|+1.35
|Liberal
|W.V. (Fred) Deis
|align="right"|1,341
|align="right"|18.72%
|align="right"|-18.90
|- bgcolor="white"
!align="left" colspan=3|Total
!align="right"|7,164
!align="right"|100.00%
!align="right"|
|-
|style="width: 130px"|Progressive Conservative
|Joan Duncan
|align="right"|4,228
|align="right"|55.53%
|align="right"|+6.73
|NDP
|J.R. Porter
|align="right"|2,158
|align="right"|28.34%
|align="right"|-4.14
|Western Canada Concept
Western Canada Concept Party of Saskatchewan
The Western Canada Concept Party of Saskatchewan was a provincial political party that was the Saskatchewan, Canada branch of the Western Canada Concept, a federal political party that advocated the separation of the four western provinces of Canada to form a new country.The party's zenith was the...
|Larry English
|align="right"|806
|align="right"|10.59%
|align="right"|–
|Liberal
|Bernie Ford
|align="right"|422
|align="right"|5.54%
|align="right"|-13.18
|- bgcolor="white"
!align="left" colspan=3|Total
!align="right"|7,614
!align="right"|100.00%
!align="right"|
|-
|style="width: 130px"|Progressive Conservative
|Joan Duncan
|align="right"|4,199
|align="right"|60.87%
|align="right"|+5.34
|NDP
|Barry Elderkin
|align="right"|2,185
|align="right"|31.68%
|align="right"|+3.34
|Liberal
|Harold Pawlitza
|align="right"|514
|align="right"|7.45%
|align="right"|+1.91
|- bgcolor="white"
!align="left" colspan=3|Total
!align="right"|6,898
!align="right"|100.00%
!align="right"|
|-
|style="width: 130px"|Prog. Conservative
Progressive Conservative Party of Saskatchewan
The Progressive Conservative Party of Saskatchewan is a right-of-centre political party in the Canadian province of Saskatchewan. Prior to 1942, it was known as the Conservative Party of Saskatchewan. Members are commonly known as Tories....
|Jack Goohsen
|align="right"|2,627
|align="right"|40.55%
|align="right"|-20.32
|NDP
|Bryan Oster
|align="right"|1,987
|align="right"|30.67%
|align="right"|-1.01
|Liberal
Saskatchewan Liberal Party
The Saskatchewan Liberal Party is a liberal political party in the Canadian province of Saskatchewan.-Early history :The party dominated Saskatchewan politics for the province's first forty years providing six of the first seven Premiers, and being in power for all but five of the years between the...
|Shirley Helmerson
|align="right"|1,865
|align="right"|28.78%
|align="right"|+21.33
|- bgcolor="white"
!align="left" colspan=3|Total
!align="right"|6,479
!align="right"|100.00%
!align="right"|
See also
Maple Creek – Northwest Territories territorial electoral district (1870–1905).- Electoral district (Canada)Electoral district (Canada)An electoral district in Canada, also known as a constituency or a riding, is a geographical constituency upon which Canada's representative democracy is based...
- List of Saskatchewan provincial electoral districts
- List of Saskatchewan general elections
- List of political parties in Saskatchewan
- Maple Creek, SaskatchewanMaple Creek, Saskatchewan-History:After the North-West Mounted Police had been established at Fort Walsh, settlers began to explore the Cypress Hills area, living along the creeks and doing small-scale ranching. The Department of the Interior was operating a First Nations farm on the Maple Creek, a few miles south from...