The 3rd Canadian Parliament was in session from March 26, 1874, until August 17, 1878 (4 years and 144 days). The membership was set by the 1874 federal election on January 22, 1874. It was dissolved prior to the 1878 election.
It was controlled by a Liberal Party majority under Prime Minister Alexander Mackenzie and the 2nd Canadian Ministry. The Official Opposition was the Conservative/Liberal-Conservative, first led by Sir John A. Macdonald.
The Speaker was Timothy Warren Anglin. See also List of Canadian electoral districts 1873-1882 for a list of the ridings in this parliament.
There were five sessions of the 3rd Parliament:
{|class="wikitable"
|-
!Session
!Start
!End
|-
| 1st
| March 26, 1874
| May 26, 1874
|-
| 2nd
| February 4, 1875
| April 8, 1875
|-
| 3rd
| February 10, 1876
| April 12, 1876
|-
| 4th
| February 8, 1877
| April 28, 1877
|-
| 5th
| February 7, 1878
| May 10, 1878
|}
List of members
Following is a full list of members of the third parliament listed first by province, then by electoral district.
Key:
- Party leaders are italicized.
- Cabinet ministers are in boldface.
- The Prime Minister is both.
- The Speaker is indicated by "()".
Electoral districts denoted by an asterisk (*) indicates that district was represented by two members.
British Columbia
{| class="wikitable sortable"
|-
!
!Electoral district
!Name
!Party
!First elected/previously elected
!No. of terms
|-
||
|Cariboo
|Joshua Spencer Thompson
|Liberal-Conservative
|1871
|3rd term
|-
||
|rowspan=2|New Westminster
|James Cunningham
|Liberal
|1874
|1st term
|-
||
|Thomas Robert McInnes (from March 25, 1878)
|Independent
|1878
|1st term
|-
||
|Vancouver
|Arthur Bunster
|Liberal
|1874
|1st term
|-
||
|rowspan=2|Victoria
|Francis James Roscoe
|Independent Liberal
|1874
|1st term
|-
||
|Amor De Cosmos
|Liberal
|1871
|3rd term
|-
||
|Yale
|Edgar Dewdney
|Conservative
|1872
|2nd term
|}
Manitoba
{| class="wikitable sortable"
|-
!
!Electoral district
!Name
!Party
!First elected/previously elected
!No. of terms
|-
||
|Lisgar
|John Christian Schultz
|Conservative
|1871
|3rd term
|-
||
|rowspan=2|Marquette
|Robert Cunningham (died 4 July 1874)
|Liberal
|1872
|2nd term
|-
||
|Joseph O'Connell Ryan (from August 25, 1874)
|Liberal
|1874
|1st term
|-
||
|rowspan=2|Provencher
|Louis Riel (expelled from the House of Commons, reelected, reexpelled and banished from Canada)
|Independent
|1873
|2nd term
|-
||
|Andrew Bannatyne (from March 31, 1875)
|Liberal
|1875
|1st term
|-
||
|Selkirk
|Donald A. Smith
|Independent Conservative
|1871
|3rd term
|}
One MP recontested his seat in a byelection, and was reelected.
- Louis Riel was reelected in Provencher on September 3, 1874, upon the passage of a motion expelling him from the House of Commons.
New Brunswick
{| class="wikitable sortable"
|-
!
!Electoral district
!Name
!Party
!First elected/previously elected
!No. of terms
|-
||
|Albert
|John Wallace
|Liberal
|1867
|3rd term
|-
||
|Carleton
|Stephen Burpee Appleby
|Liberal
|1872
|2nd term
|-
||
|Charlotte
|Arthur Hill Gillmor
|Liberal
|1874
|1st term
|-
||
|rowspan=2|City and County of St. John
|Isaac Burpee
|Liberal
|1872
|2nd term
|-
||
|Acalus Lockwood Palmer
|Liberal
|1872
|2nd term
|-
||
|City of St. John
|Jeremiah Smith Boies De Veber
|Liberal
|1873
|2nd term
|-
||
|Gloucester
|Timothy Warren Anglin
|Liberal
|1867
|3rd term
|-
||
|Kent
|George McLeod
|Independent
|1874
|1st term
|-
||
|King's
|James Domville
|Conservative
|1872
|2nd term
|-
||
|Northumberland
|Peter Mitchell
|Independent
|1872
|2nd term
|-
||
|Queen's
|John Ferris
|Liberal
|1867
|3rd term
|-
||
|rowspan=2|Restigouche
|George Moffat
|Conservative
|1870
|3rd term
|-
||
|George Haddow (from January 12, 1878)
|Independent
|1878
|1st term
|-
||
|Sunbury
|Charles Burpee
|Liberal
|1867
|3rd term
|-
||
|Victoria
|John Costigan
|Liberal-Conservative
|1867
|3rd term
|-
||
|Westmorland
|Albert James Smith
|Liberal
|1867
|3rd term
|-
||
|York
|John Pickard
|Independent Liberal
|1868
|3rd term
|}
Two MPs recontested their seats in a byelection, and were reelected:
- Timothy Warren Anglin was reelected in Gloucester on July 2, 1877.
- Peter Mitchell was reelected in Northumberland on February 5, 1878.
Nova Scotia
{| class="wikitable sortable"
|-
!
!Electoral district
!Name
!Party
!First elected/previously elected
!No. of terms
|-
||
||Annapolis
|William Hallett Ray
|Liberal
|1867
|3rd term
|-
||
|Antigonish
|Angus McIsaac
|Liberal
|1873
|2nd term
|-
||
|Cape Breton
|Newton LeGayet Mackay
|Liberal
|1872
|2nd term
|-
||
|Cape Breton
|William McDonald
|Conservative
|1872
|2nd term
|-
||
|Colchester
|Thomas McKay
|Liberal-Conservative
|1874
|1st term
|-
||
|Cumberland
|Charles Tupper
|Conservative
|1867
|3rd term
|-
||
|rowspan=3|Digby
|Edwin Randolph Oakes
|Liberal-Conservative
|1874
|1st term
|-
||
|William Berrian Vail (from October 26, 1874)
|Liberal
|1874
|1st term
|-
||
|John Chipman Wade (from January 29, 1878)
|Independent
|1878
|1st term
|-
||
|Guysborough
|John Angus Kirk
|Liberal
|1874
|1st term
|-
||
|Halifax
|Alfred Gilpin Jones
|Independent
|1867, 1874
|2nd term*
|-
||
|Halifax
|Patrick Power
|Independent Liberal
|1867, 1874
|2nd term*
|-
||
|Hants
|Monson Henry Goudge
|Liberal
|1873
|2nd term
|-
||
|Inverness
|Samuel McDonnell
|Liberal
|1872
|2nd term
|-
||
|Kings
|Frederick William Borden
|Liberal
|1874
|1st term
|-
||
|Lunenburg
|Charles Edward Church
|Liberal
|1872
|2nd term
|-
||
|rowspan=2|Pictou*
|James William Carmichael
|Liberal
|1867, 1874
|2nd term*
|-
||
|John A. Dawson
|Liberal
|1874
|1st term
|-
||
|Queens
|James Fraser Forbes
|Liberal
|1867
|3rd term
|-
||
|Richmond
|Edmund Power Flynn
|Liberal
|1874
|1st term
|-
||
|Shelburne
|Thomas Coffin
|Liberal
|1867
|3rd term
|-
||
|rowspan=4|Victoria
|William Ross
|Liberal
|1867
|3rd term
|-
||
|Charles James Campbell (from December 17, 1874)
|Conservative
|1874
|1st term
|-
||
|Barclay Edmund Tremaine (from April 28, 1875)
|Liberal
|1875
|1st term
|-
||
|Charles James Campbell (from September 21, 1876)
|Conservative
|1876
|1st term
|-
||
|Yarmouth
|Frank Killam
|Liberal
|1868
|3rd term
|}
Two MPs recontested their seats in byelections, and were reelected.
- Thomas McKay was reelected in Colchester on December 17, 1874
- Alfred Gilpin Jones was reelected in Halifax on January 29, 1878, on being named Minister of Militia and Defence.
Ontario
{| class="wikitable sortable"
|-
!
!Electoral district
!Name
!Party
!First elected/previously elected
!No. of terms
|-
||
|Addington
|Schuyler Shibley
|Liberal-Conservative
|1872
|2nd term
|-
||
|Algoma
|Edward Borron
|Liberal
|1874
|1st term
|-
||
|Bothwell
|David Mills
|Liberal
|1867
|3rd term
|-
||
|Brant North
|Gavin Fleming
|Liberal
|1872
|2nd term
|-
||
|Brant South
|William Paterson
|Liberal
|1872
|2nd term
|-
||
|Brockville
|Jacob Dockstader Buell
|Liberal
|1872
|2nd term
|-
||
|Bruce North
|John Gillies
|Liberal
|1872
|2nd term
|-
||
|Bruce South
|Edward Blake
||Liberal
|1872
|2nd term
|-
||
|rowspan=2|Cardwell
|John Hillyard Cameron
|Conservative
|1867
|3rd term
|-
||
|Dalton McCarthy (from December 14, 1876)
|Liberal-Conservative
|1876
|1st term
|-
||
|Carleton
|John Rochester
|Conservative
|1872
|2nd term
|-
||
|Cornwall
|Alexander Francis Macdonald
|Liberal
|1874
|1st term
|-
||
|Dundas
|William Gibson
|Independent Liberal
|1872
|2nd term
|-
||
|Durham East
|Lewis Ross
|Liberal Reformer
|1872
|2nd term
|-
||
|rowspan=2|Durham West
|Edmund Burke Wood
|Liberal
|1867
|3rd term
|-
||
|Harvey William Burk (from April 7, 1874)
|Liberal
|1874
|1st term
|-
||
|rowspan=2|Elgin East
|William Harvey
|Liberal
|1872
|2nd term
|-
||
|Colin MacDougall (from August 11, 1874)
|Liberal
|1874
|1st term
|-
||
|Elgin West
|George Elliott Casey
|Liberal
|1872
|2nd term
|-
||
|Essex
|William McGregor
|Liberal
|1874
|1st term
|-
||
|Frontenac
|George Airey Kirkpatrick
|Conservative
|1870
|3rd term
|-
||
|rowspan=2|Glengarry
|Donald Alexander MacDonald
|Liberal
|1867
|3rd term
|-
||
|Archibald McNab (from July 7, 1875)
|Liberal
|1875
|1st term
|-
||
|Grenville South
|William Henry Brouse
|Liberal
|1872
|2nd term
|-
||
|Grey East
|William Kingston Flesher
|Conservative
|1872
|2nd term
|-
||
|Grey North
|George Snider
|Liberal
|1867
|3rd term
|-
||
|Grey South
|George Landerkin
|Liberal
|1872
|2nd term
|-
||
|Haldimand
|David Thompson
|Liberal
|1867
|3rd term
|-
||
|rowspan=2|Halton
|Daniel Black Chisholm
|Liberal-Conservative
|1867
|3rd term
|-
||
|William McCraney (from January 25, 1875)
|Liberal
|1875
|1st term
|-
||
|Hamilton
|Aemilius Irving
|Liberal
|1874
|1st term
|-
||
|Hamilton
|Andrew Trew Wood
|Liberal
|1874
|1st term
|-
||
|Hastings East
|John White
|Conservative
|1871
|3rd term
|-
||
|Hastings North
|Mackenzie Bowell
|Conservative
|1867
|3rd term
|-
||
|Hastings West
|James Brown
|Conservative
|1867
|3rd term
|-
||
|Huron Centre
|Horace Horton
|Liberal
|1872
|2nd term
|-
||
|Huron North
|Thomas Farrow
|Liberal-Conservative
|1867
|3rd term
|-
||
|rowspan=2|Huron South
|Malcolm Colin Cameron (election overturned in 1875)
|Liberal
|1867
|3rd term
|-
||
|Thomas Greenway (from 1875)
|Independent
|1875
|1st term
|-
||
|Kent
|Rufus Stephenson
|Conservative
|1867
|3rd term
|-
||
|Kingston
|Sir John A. Macdonald
|Liberal-Conservative
|1867
|3rd term
|-
||
|Lambton
|Alexander Mackenzie
|Liberal
|1867
|3rd term
|-
||
|Lanark North
|Daniel Galbraith
|Liberal
|1872
|2nd term
|-
||
|Lanark South
|John Graham Haggart
|Conservative
|1872
|2nd term
|-
||
|Leeds North and Grenville North
|Charles Frederick Ferguson
|Liberal-Conservative
|1874
|1st term
|-
||
|Leeds South
|David Ford Jones
|Conservative
|1874
|1st term
|-
||
|Lennox
|Richard John Cartwright
|Liberal
|1867
|3rd term
|-
||
|Lincoln
|James Norris
|Liberal
|1874
|1st term
|-
||
|rowspan=2|London
|John Walker
|Liberal
|1874
|1st term
|-
||
|James Harshaw Fraser (from February 18, 1875)
|Liberal-Conservative
|1875
|1st term
|-
||
|rowspan=2|Middlesex East
|Crowell Willson (election successfully contested 1874)
|Liberal-Conservative
|1874
|1st term
|-
||
|Duncan Macmillan (from January 28, 1875)
|Liberal-Conservative
|1875
|1st term
|-
||
|rowspan=2|Middlesex North
|Thomas Scatcherd
|Liberal
|1867
|3rd term
|-
||
|Robert Colin Scatcherd (from June 7, 1876)
|Liberal
|1876
|1st term
|-
||
|Middlesex West
|George William Ross
|Liberal
|1872
|2nd term
|-
||
|Monck
|Lachlin McCallum
|Liberal-Conservative
|1874
|1st term
|-
||
|Muskoka
|Alexander Peter Cockburn
|Liberal
|1872
|2nd term
|-
||
|Niagara
|Josiah Burr Plumb
|Conservative
|1874
|1st term
|-
||
|Norfolk North
|John M. Charlton
|Liberal
|1872
|2nd term
|-
||
|rowspan=2|Norfolk South
|John Stuart
|Liberal
|1874
|1st term
|-
||
|William Wallace (from December 16, 1874)
|Conservative
|1874
|1st term
|-
||
|Northumberland East
|James Lyons Biggar
|Independent Liberal
|1874
|1st term
|-
||
|Northumberland West
|William Kerr
|Liberal
|1874
|1st term
|-
||
|rowspan=2|Ontario North
|Adam Gordon
|Liberal
|1874
|1st term
|-
||
|William Henry Gibbs (from July 5, 1876)
|Conservative
|1874
|1st term
|-
||
|rowspan=2|Ontario South
|Malcolm Cameron
|Liberal Party of Canada
|1874
|1st term
|-
||
|Thomas Nicholson Gibbs (from July 5, 1876)
|Liberal-Conservative
|1876
|1st term
|-
||
|rowspan=2|Ottawa (City of)*
|Pierre St. Jean
|Liberal
|1874
|1st term
|-
||
|Joseph Merrill Currier
|Liberal-Conservative
|1867
|3rd term
|-
||
|Oxford North
|Thomas Oliver
|Liberal
|1867
|3rd term
|-
||
|rowspan=2|Oxford South
|Ebenezer Vining Bodwell (until April 1874 when he became superintendent of the Welland Canal)
|Liberal
|1867
|3rd term
|-
||
|James Atchison Skinner (from May 23, 1874)
|Liberal
|1874
|1st term
|-
||
|Peel
|Robert Smith
|Liberal
|1872
|2nd term
|-
||
|Perth North
|Andrew Monteith
|Conservative
|1874
|1st term
|-
||
|Perth South
|James Trow
|Liberal
|1872
|2nd term
|-
||
|Peterborough East
|James Hall
|Liberal
|1874
|1st term
|-
||
|Peterborough West
|John Bertram
|Liberal
|1874
|1st term
|-
||
|Prescott
|Albert Hagar
|Liberal
|1867
|3rd term
|-
||
|Prince Edward
|Walter Ross
|Liberal
|1867
|3rd term
|-
||
|rowspan=3|Renfrew North
|Peter White
|Liberal-Conservative
|1874
|1st term
|-
||
|William Murray (from November 4, 1874)
|Liberal
|1874
|1st term
|-
||
|Peter White (from January 21, 1876)
|Liberal-Conservative
|1876
|1st term
|-
||
|Renfrew South
|John Lorn McDougall
|Liberal
|1867, 1874
|2nd term*
|-
||
|Russell
|Robert Blackburn
|Liberal
|1874
|1st term
|-
||
|Simcoe North
|Hermon Henry Cook
|Liberal
|1872
|2nd term
|-
||
|Simcoe South
|William Carruthers Little
|Liberal-Conservative
|1867
|3rd term
|-
||
|Stormont
|Cyril Archibald
|Liberal
|1872
|2nd term
|-
||
|rowspan=2|Toronto Centre
|Robert Wilkes
|Liberal
|1872
|2nd term
|-
||
|John Macdonald (from May 21, 1875)
|Independent Liberal
|1875
|1st term
|-
||
|rowspan=2|Toronto East
|John O'Donohoe
|Liberal-Conservative
|1874
|1st term
|-
||
|Samuel Platt (from January 18, 1875)
|Independent
|1875
|1st term
|-
||
|rowspan=2|Victoria North
|James Maclennan
|Liberal
|1874
|1st term
|-
||
|Hector Cameron (from September 17, 1875)
|Conservative
|1875
|1st term
|-
||
|Victoria South
|Arthur McQuade
|Conservative
|1874
|1st term
|-
||
|Waterloo North
|Isaac Erb Bowman
|Liberal
|1867
|3rd term
|-
||
|Waterloo South
|James Young
|Liberal
|1867
|3rd term
|-
||
|Welland
|William Alexander Thomson
|Liberal
|1872
|2nd term
|-
||
|Wellington Centre
|George Turner Orton
|Liberal-Conservative
|1874
|1st term
|-
||
|Wellington North
|Nathaniel Higinbotham
|Liberal
|1872
|2nd term
|-
||
|rowspan=2|Wellington South
|David Stirton
|Liberal
|1867
|3rd term
|-
||
|Donald Guthrie (from July 5, 1876)
|Liberal
|1876
|1st term
|-
||
|Wentworth North
|Thomas Bain
|Liberal
|1872
|2nd term
|-
||
|Wentworth South
|Joseph Rymal
|Liberal
|1867
|3rd term
|-
||
|rowspan=2|West Toronto
|Thomas Moss
|Liberal
|1873
|2nd term
|-
||
|John Beverley Robinson (from November 6, 1875)
|Conservative
|1875
|1st term
|-
||
|York East
|James Metcalfe
|Liberal
|1867
|3rd term
|-
||
|York North
|Alfred Hutchinson Dymond
|Liberal
|1874
|1st term
|-
||
|York West
|David Blain
|Liberal
|1872
|2nd term
|}
22 MPs recontested their seats in byelections, and were reelected
- William McGregor was reelected in Essex on October 22, 1874.
- John Lorn McDougall was reelected in Renfrew South on October 24, 1874, and again on February 20, 1875.
- Schuyler Shibley was reelected in Addington on October 28, 1874.
- William Kerr was reelected in Northumberland West on November 17, 1874.
- James Norris was reelected in Lincoln on November 17, 1874, and May 9, 1877.
- James Lyons Biggar was reelected in Northumberland East on December 12, 1874.
- George Turner Orton was reelected in Wellington Centre on December 13, 1874.
- Charles Frederick Ferguson was reelected in Leeds North and Grenville North on December 16, 1874.
- James MacLennan was reelected in Victoria North on December 22, 1874.
- Josiah Burr Plumb was reelected in Niagara on December 22, 1874.
- Herman Henry Cook was reelected in Simcoe North on December 26, 1874.
- Sir John A. Macdonald was reelected in Kingston on December 29, 1874.
- Nathaniel Higinbotham was reelected in Wellington North on March 18, 1875.
- Aemilius Irving was reelected in Hamilton on May 20, 1875.
- Andrew Trew Wood was reelected in Hamilton on May 20, 1875.
- Edward Blake was reelected in Bruce South on June 2, 1875, after being named Minister of Justice.
- Lachlan McCallum was reelected in Monck on June 22, 1875.
- Alfred Hutchison Dymond was reelected in York North on June 29, 1875.
- Andrew Monteith was reelected in Perth North on July 7, 1875.
- Archibald McNab was reelected in Glengarry on July 31, 1876.
- David Mills was reelected in Bothwell on November 15, 1876, after being named Minister of the Interior.
- Joseph Merrill Currier was reelected in Ottawa on May 9, 1877.
Prince Edward Island
{| class="wikitable sortable"
|-
!
!Electoral district
!Name
!Party
!First elected/previously elected
!No. of terms
|-
||
|rowspan="2"|King's County*
|Daniel Davies
|Conservative
|1873
|2nd term
|-
||
|Peter Adolphus McIntyre
|Liberal
|1874
|1st term
|-
||
|rowspan=2|Prince County*
|Stanislaus Francis Perry
|Liberal
|1874
|1st term
|-
||
|James Yeo
|Liberal
|1873
|2nd term
|-
||
|rowspan=3|Queen's County*
|David Laird
|Liberal
|1873
|2nd term
|-
||
|Peter Sinclair
|Liberal
|1873
|2nd term
|-
||
|James Colledge Pope (from November 22, 1876)
|Conservative
|1876
|1st term
|}
Quebec
{| class="wikitable sortable"
|-
!
!Electoral district
!Name
!Party
!First elected/previously elected
!No. of terms
|-
||
|rowspan="3"|Argenteuil
|John Abbott
|Liberal-Conservative
|1867
|3rd term
|-
||
|Lemuel Cushing (from November 4, 1874)
|Liberal
|1874
|1st term
|-
||
|Thomas Christie (from December 31, 1875)
|Liberal
|1875
|1st term
|-
||
|Bagot
|Joseph-Alfred Mousseau
|Conservative
|1874
|1st term
|-
||
|rowspan=2|Beauce
|Christian Pozer
|Liberal
|1867
|3rd term
|-
||
|Joseph Bolduc (from October 18, 1876)
|Conservative
|1876
|1st term
|-
||
|Beauharnois
|Ulysse-Janvier Robillard
|Independent Conservative
|1872
|2nd term
|-
||
|rowspan=2|Bellechasse
|Télesphore Fournier
|Liberal
|1870
|3rd term
|-
||
|Joseph-Goderic Blanchet (from November 23, 1875)
|Conservative
|1875
|1st term
|-
||
|rowspan=2|Berthier
|Anselme Homère Pâquet
|Liberal
|1867
|3rd term
|-
||
|Edward Octavian Cuthbert (from February 27, 1875)
|Conservative
|1875
|1st term
|-
||
|Bonaventure
|Théodore Robitaille
|Conservative
|1867
|3rd term
|-
||
|Brome
|Nathaniel Pettes
|Liberal
|1874
|1st term
|-
||
|rowspan=2|Chambly
|Amable Jodoin
|Liberal
|1874
|1st term
|-
||
|Pierre-Basile Benoit (from January 7, 1876)
|Conservative
|1876
|1st term
|-
||
|Champlain
|Hippolyte Montplaisir
|Liberal-Conservative
|1874
|1st term
|-
||
|rowspan=2|Charlevoix
|Pierre-Alexis Tremblay
|Liberal
|1867
|3rd term
|-
||
|Hector-Louis Langevin (from January 22, 1876)
|Conservative
|1876
|1st term
|-
||
|Châteauguay
|Luther Hamilton Holton
|Liberal
|1867
|3rd term
|-
||
|Chicoutimi—Saguenay
|Ernest Cimon
|Conservative
|1874
|1st term
|-
||
|Compton
|John Henry Pope
|Liberal-Conservative
|1867
|3rd term
|-
||
|Dorchester
|François Fortunat Rouleau
|Conservative
|1874
|1st term
|-
||
|rowspan=2|Drummond—Arthabaska
|Wilfrid Laurier
|Liberal
|1874
|1st term
|-
||
|Désiré Olivier Bourbeau (from October 27, 1877)
|Conservative
|1877
|1st term
|-
||
|rowspan=2|Gaspé
|Louis George Harper
|Conservative
|1874
|1st term
|-
||
|John Short (from July 10, 1875)
|Conservative
|1875
|1st term
|-
||
|Hochelaga
|Alphonse Desjardins
|Conservative
|1874
|1st term
|-
||
|Huntingdon
|Julius Scriver
|Liberal
|1869
|3rd term
|-
||
|Iberville
|François Béchard
|Liberal
|1867
|3rd term
|-
||
|Jacques Cartier
|Rodolphe Laflamme
|Liberal
|1872
|2nd term
|-
||
|Joliette
|Louis François Georges Baby
|Conservative
|1872
|2nd term
|-
||
|rowspan=2|Kamouraska
|Charles Pelletier
|Liberal
|1869
|3rd term
|-
||
|Charles-François Roy (from February 19, 1877)
|Conservative
|1877
|1st term
|-
||
|Laprairie
|Alfred Pinsonneault
|Conservative
|1867
|3rd term
|-
||
|L'Assomption
|Hilaire Hurteau
|Liberal-Conservative
|1874
|1st term
|-
||
|Laval
|Joseph-Aldric Ouimet
|Liberal-Conservative
|1873
|2nd term
|-
||
|Lévis
|Louis-Honoré Fréchette
|Liberal
|1874
|1st term
|-
||
|L'Islet
|Philippe Baby Casgrain
|Liberal
|1872
|2nd term
|-
||
|Lotbinière
|Henri Bernier
|Liberal
|1874
|1st term
|-
||
|Maskinongé
|Louis-Alphonse Boyer
|Liberal
|1872
|2nd term
|-
||
|Mégantic
|Édouard-Émery Richard
|Liberal
|1872
|2nd term
|-
||
|Missisquoi
|William Donahue
|Liberal
|1874
|1st term
|-
||
|Montcalm
|Firmin Dugas
|Conservative
|1871
|3rd term
|-
||
|Montmagny
|Henri-Thomas Taschereau
|Liberal
|1872
|2nd term
|-
||
|Montmorency
|Jean Langlois
|Conservative
|1867
|3rd term
|-
||
|rowspan=2|Montreal Centre
|Michael Patrick Ryan
|Liberal-Conservative
|1872
|2nd term
|-
||
|Bernard Devlin (from November 26, 1875)
|Liberal
|1875
|1st term
|-
||
|Montreal East
|Louis-Amable Jetté
|Liberal
|1872
|2nd term
|-
||
|rowspan=2|Montreal West
|Frederick Mackenzie
|Liberal
|1874
|1st term
|-
||
|Thomas Workman (from October 30, 1875)
|Liberal
|1875
|1st term
|-
||
|rowspan=2|Napierville
|Antoine-Aimé Dorion
|Liberal
|1872
|2nd term
|-
||
|Sixte Coupal dit la Reine (from August 4, 1874)
|Liberal
|1874
|1st term
|-
||
|rowspan=2|Nicolet
|Joseph Gaudet
|Conservative
|1867
|3rd term
|-
||
|François-Xavier-Ovide Méthot (from December 18, 1877)
|Independent Conservative
|1877
|1st term
|-
||
|Ottawa (County of)
|Alonzo Wright
|Liberal-Conservative
|1867
|3rd term
|-
||
|Pontiac
|William McKay Wright
|Liberal-Conservative
|1872
|2nd term
|-
||
|Portneuf
|Esdras Alfred de St-Georges
|Liberal
|1872
|2nd term
|-
||
|rowspan=2|Quebec-Centre
|Joseph-Édouard Cauchon
|Conservative
|1872
|2nd term
|-
||
|Jacques Malouin (from November 3, 1877)
|Independent
|1877
|1st term
|-
||
|Quebec County
|Joseph-Philippe-René-Adolphe Caron
|Conservative
|1873
|2nd term
|-
||
|rowspan=2|Quebec East
|Isidore Thibaudeau
|Liberal
|1874
|1st term
|-
||
|Wilfrid Laurier (from November 28, 1877)
|Liberal
|1874
|1st term
|-
||
|Quebec West
|Thomas McGreevy
|Liberal-Conservative
|1867
|3rd term
|-
||
|Richelieu
|Georges Isidore Barthe
|Independent Conservative
|1870, 1874
|2nd term*
|-
||
|Richmond—Wolfe
|Henry Aylmer
|Liberal
|1874
|1st term
|-
||
|Rimouski
|Jean-Baptiste Romuald Fiset
|Liberal
|1872
|2nd term
|-
||
|Rouville
|Guillaume Cheval dit St-Jacques
|Liberal
|1867, 1874
|2nd term*
|-
||
|Saint Maurice
|Charles Gérin-Lajoie
|Liberal
|1874
|1st term
|-
||
|Shefford
|Lucius Huntington
|Liberal
|1867
|3rd term
|-
||
|Town of Sherbrooke
|Edward Towle Brooks
|Conservative
|1872
|2nd term
|-
||
|Soulanges
|Jacques-Philippe Lanthier
|Conservative
|1872
|2nd term
|-
||
|St. Hyacinthe
|Louis Delorme
|Liberal
|1870
|3rd term
|-
||
|St. John's
|François Bourassa
|Liberal
|1867
|3rd term
|-
||
|Stanstead
|Charles Carroll Colby
|Liberal-Conservative
|1867
|3rd term
|-
||
|Témiscouata
|Jean-Baptiste Pouliot
|Liberal
|1874
|1st term
|-
||
|Terrebonne
|Louis Masson
|Conservative
|1867
|3rd term
|-
||
|Three Rivers
|William McDougall
|Conservative
|1868
|3rd term
|-
||
|rowspan=3|Two Mountains
|Wilfrid Prévost
|Liberal
|1872
|2nd term
|-
||
|Charles Auguste Maximilien Globensky (from February 26, 1875)
|Independent
|1875
|1st term
|-
||
|Jean-Baptiste Daoust (from March 11, 1876)
|Conservative
|1876
|1st term
|-
||
|Vaudreuil
|Robert Harwood
|Liberal-Conservative
|1872
|2nd term
|-
||
|Verchères
|Félix Geoffrion
|Liberal
|1867
|3rd term
|-
||
|Yamaska
|Charles Gill
|Conservative
|1874
|1st term
|}
Twelve MPs recontested their seats in byelections, and were reelected:
- Félix Geoffrion was reelected in Verchères on July 25, 1874, after being named Minister of Inland Revenue.
- Henry Aylmer was reelected in Richmond—Wolfe on December 4, 1874, after being named Receiver-General.
- Louis François George Baby was reelected in Joliette on December 10, 1874.
- Frederick Mackenzie was reelected in Montreal West on December 10, 1874.
- Amable Jodoin was reelected in Chambly on December 30, 1874.
- Hilaire Hurteau was reelected in L'Assomption on January 16, 1875.
- Sixte Coupal dit la Reine was reelected in Napierville on June 19, 1875.
- Bernard Devlin was reelected in Montreal Centre on November 26, 1875.
- François Fortunat Rouleau was reelected in Dorchester on December 14, 1875.
- Joseph-Édouard Cauchon was reelected in Quebec Centre on December 27, 1875, after being named President of the Privy Council.
- Rodolphe Laflamme was reelected in Jacques Cartier on December 28, 1876, after being named Minister of Inland Revenue.
- Hector-Louis Langevin was reelected in Charlevoix on March 23, 1877.
