John Vance (MP)
John Vance was a Conservative MP for Dublin City from 1852 until his defeat in 1865. He was later elected unopposed for Armagh City and represented the constituency from 30 June 1867 until his death.
Vance was born in Dublin to a family with strong connections to County Tyrone; they are believed to have emigrated from Scotland in the eighteenth century. He was the eldest son of Andrew Vance of Rutland Square and Mary Falls, daughter of James Falls of Aughnacloy, County Tyrone. His numerous siblings included Andrew Vance, Law Adviser to the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland, and Thomas Vance, a well-to-do merchant, of Blackrock House, Blackrock, Dublin. Richard Dowse, the eminent politician and judge, was a cousin through his grandmother Mary Vance.
He was married and had two daughters: Florence, who never married, and Adelaide-Sidney, who married Sir Richard Francis Keane, 4th Baronet, and was the mother of the politician Sir John Keane, 5th Baronet.
In the 1847 General Election, Vance was unsuccessful in his attempts to be elected for Canterbury. In 1853, the Canterbury Bribery Commission found his agent guilty of bribery.
Dublin City Elections
General Election, 1852 (2 seats)
The Times reports Vance's address to the electors as all that the Protestant Party could reasonably or unreasonably desire. The Dublin Orange Lodges pronounce for him. He is against the Maynooth Grant.- Edward Grogan (Conservative) 4,531
- John Vance 4,429
- John Reynolds 3,019
General Election, 1857 (2 seats)
- Edward Grogan 3,767
- John Vance 3,711
- Francis William Brady 3,405
- John Reynolds 3,348
General Election, 1859 (2 seats)
- Sir Edward Grogan, Bt 4,251
- John Vance 4,224
- Francis William Brady 3,976
- Alexander McCarthy 3,881
General Election, 1865 (2 seats)
- Sir Benjamin Lee Guinness, Bt 4,739
- Jonathan Pim 4,653
- John Vance 4,073