On May 5, 2010, at 9:52 AM, Terry Bouricius wrote:

> The first inventor of STV apparently (though with repeat voting rather
> than ranked ballots) was Thomas Wright Hill. He devised the election
> system used by the Society for Literary and Scientific Improvement in
> 1821. The overlap between STV and Proxy Voting is apparent in this quote
> from those bylaws...

I obtained a scan of the bylaws from David Hill, a descendent of Thomas Wright 
who you might recognize from work he's done with STV. I've linked a copy of it 
to the Wikipedia article on TWH:

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/2/2c/Thomas_wright_hill_laws_1819.pdf

I've also retyped the voting rule itself in the main article:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Wright_Hill#Hill_and_the_Single_Transferable_Vote

The use of repeat voting is somewhat limited; only (randomly selected) surplus 
votes are changed in later rounds.

Also of interest is the use of a fixed quota (5) rather than a fixed number of 
seats.

As you see from this timeline 
<http://prfound.org/index.php/resources/timeline/>, TWH's idea significantly 
predates other (known) uses of STV, though I'm not aware of any evidence that 
his ideas influenced its later development.

The method is pedagogically useful in describing the underlying concept of STV; 
it's particularly easy to "get".
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