The Lillooet electoral district was a riding (provincial constituency) in the Canadian province of British Columbia, centred on the town of the same name and with various boundaries. Originally with two members, the constituency was split into Lillooet West and Lillooet East in the 1894, 1898, and 1900 elections, with Lillooet West being recomprised as one riding (with only one member) in the 1903 election.
The riding was one of the first created in British Columbia, and at the time the town of Lillooet was one of the largest in the province (it is now one of the smallest). It was originally a two-member riding. It was an essentially rural riding, spanning the southern Cariboo and the mountain country west of Lillooet and the northern part of the Fraser Canyon. It was succeeded by the Yale-Lillooet riding, which is still extant.
Members of the Legislative Assembly
Thomas Basil Humphreys - 1871-1875
Andrew Thomas Jamieson - 1871-1875
William M. Brown - 1875-1882 (Reform slate and from 1878 Opposition)
William Morrison - 1875-1878 (Reform slate)
William Saul - 1878-1882 (Opposition and from 1886 Government)
Edward Allen - 1882-1890 (Opposition and from 1886 Government)
4 Resignations 26 September 1874 of T.B. Humphreys and W. Saul over a "dispute between the two gentlemen as to which represents the popular feeling of the district" (Victoria Colonist, September 29, 1874).
5 Captain Martley homesteaded at Pavilion around 1863, and bought out the older Carson spread on Pavilion Mountain. Ernest Crawford Carson and Robert Henry Carson, his neighbours, became MLAs and cabinet ministers in the 1930s in Lillooet and Kamloops respectively.
2 Byelection caused by resignation of A.E.B. Davie upon his appointment to the Executive Council January 29 1883. Date given is day of return of writs, as polling day was not necessary.
6 Brother of Robert Henry Carson, Liberal MLA for Kamloops (electoral district)|Kamloops]]. Both became cabinet ministers in their respective governments. Their father Robert Carson came west via the Sierra Nevada passes to California and, coming north for the Fraser Canyon gold rush, wound up homesteading on Pavilion Mountain in the wake of the gold rush, founding one of BC's earliest ranches. He sold it to Captain John Martley, who was a candidate in this riding in 1878 and whose descendants still own the property.