Vancouver City (provincial electoral district)

Vancouver City was a provincial electoral district in the Canadian province of British Columbia. It was a multiple member district based in the newly created city of Vancouver.

It did not appear on the hustings until the 1890 election – the city only having been chartered and named in the year of the previous election when the locality was a small polling area of the New Westminster (provincial electoral district) riding. It is a sign of Vancouver's rapid growth that by 1890 there were over 300 electors, by 1900 there were 15,000, by 1903 over 25,000 votes cast; prior to 1885, the population of the waterside village of Granville, BI (Burrard Inlet, a postal address shared by Moodyville, New Brighton and Barnet) had been in the range of 300.

When the district was created, it had two members, but because of population increase, it was made a three-member district prior to the 1894 election, a four-member district prior to the 1898 election, and a five-member district in 1903. By 1920, with Vancouver having grown to 200,000 inhabitants, the district became a six-member seat with about 40,000 voting and over 200,000 votes cast. Under the block voting system in use, each voter could cast as many votes as there were seats to fill.

After the 1928 election, it was given nine MLAs and redistributed into four districts, three with two members each (Vancouver-Burrard, Vancouver Centre and Vancouver East) and Vancouver-Point Grey with three members.