Elections to Lancashire County Council were held in May 1889.
The council was newly created, and at the time covered the entire administrative county of Lancashire.
Party politics played a limited role in Lancashire politics at the time, and would remain limited until the First World War.
As a result, the election saw limited competition, with only 38.1% of divisions contested, in contrast to the 56.3% average across England & Wales in the 1889 local elections.
[1] The limited role of party politics was also seen in the composition of the council leadership, with the first county Chairman being J. T. Hibbert, a Liberal, while his Vice-Chairman, C. R. Jackson, was a Conservative.