St. Pancras North was a borough constituency represented in the House of Commons of the Parliament of the United Kingdom. It elected one Member of Parliament (MP) by the first-past-the-post system of election. It was created in 1885 and abolished in 1983 with the area becoming part of the new constituency of Holborn and St Pancras.
Boundaries
thumb|A map showing the wards of St Pancras Metropolitan Borough as they appeared in 1916.
1918–1950: The Metropolitan Borough of St Pancras wards of one and two, and the part of ward number three lying to the north and west of a line running along the middle of Camden Road from a point where that road is intersected by the eastern boundary of the metropolitan borough to the point where that road crosses the Regent's Canal and thence westward along the middle of that canal to the western boundary of Ward number three.
1950–1974: The Metropolitan Borough of St Pancras wards of one, two, three and four.
1974–1983: The London Borough of Camden wards of Camden, Chalk Farm, Gospel Oak, Grafton, Highgate, and St John's.
Members of Parliament
{| class="wikitable"
|-
!colspan="2"|Election!!Member!!Party!!Notes
|-
|style="color:inherit;background-color: " |
| 1885
| Thomas Henry Bolton
| Liberal
|-
|style="color:inherit;background-color: " |
| 1886
| Charles Cochrane-Baillie
| Conservative
| later Baron Lamington
|-
|style="color:inherit;background-color: " |
| 1890 by-election
|rowspan="2"| Thomas Henry Bolton
| Liberal
|rowspan="2"|Bolton was re-elected in 1892 as a Liberal, but later joined the Liberal Unionists
|-
|style="color:inherit;background-color: " |
| 1893?
| Liberal Unionist Party
|-
|style="color:inherit;background-color: " |
| 1895
| Edward Robert Pacy Moon
| Conservative
|-
|style="color:inherit;background-color: " |
| 1906
| Willoughby Dickinson
| Liberal
| later 1st Baron Dickinson
|-
|style="color:inherit;background-color: " |
| 1918
|rowspan="2"| John Lorden
| Coalition Conservative
|-
|style="color:inherit;background-color: " |
| 1922
| Conservative
|-
|style="color:inherit;background-color: " |
| 1923
| James Marley
| Labour
|-
|style="color:inherit;background-color: " |
| 1924
| Ian Fraser
| Conservative Party
|-
|style="color:inherit;background-color: " |
| 1929
| James Marley
| Labour
|-
|style="color:inherit;background-color: " |
| 1931
| Ian Fraser
| Conservative Party
| later Baron Fraser of Lonsdale
|-
|style="color:inherit;background-color: " |
| 1937 by-election
| Robert Grant-Ferris
| Conservative Party
| later Baron Harvington
|-
|style="color:inherit;background-color: " |
| 1945
| George House
| Labour
|-
|style="color:inherit;background-color: " |
| 1949 by-election
| Kenneth Robinson
| Labour
|Minister of Health 1964–1968
|-
|style="color:inherit;background-color: " |
| 1970
| Albert Stallard
| Labour
|
|-
|
| 1983
|colspan="3"|constituency abolished: see Holborn & St Pancras
|}
Election results
Elections in the 1880s
Elections in the 1900s
Elections in the 1920s
thumb|120px|Henry Roome
Elections in the 1930s
Elections in the 1940s
Elections in the 1950s
Elections in the 1960s
Elections in the 1970s
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<section end="General Election February 1974"/>
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<section begin="General Election October 1974"/>
<section end="General Election October 1974"/>
