11th Parliament of Ontario
The 11th Legislative Assembly of Ontario was in session from January 25, 1905, until May 2, 1908, just prior to the 1908 general election. The majority party was the Ontario Conservative Party led by Sir James P. Whitney.
The Commissioner of Crown Lands became the Minister of Lands, Forests and Mines. The Commissioner of Public Works became the Minister of Public Works. An Electrical Power Commission was formed to consider the feasibility of delivering electrical power generated at Niagara Falls to industrial centres in the province.
Joseph Wesley St. John served as speaker for the assembly until his death on April 7, 1907. Thomas Crawford succeeded St. John as speaker.[1]
Riding | Member | Party |
---|---|---|
Addington | William James Paul | Conservative |
Algoma | William Ross Smyth | Conservative |
Brant | John Henry Fisher | Conservative |
Brant South | Thomas Hiram Preston | Liberal |
Brockville | George Perry Graham[nb 1] | Liberal |
Albert Edward Donovan (1907) | Conservative | |
Bruce Centre | Hugh Clark | Conservative |
Bruce North | Charles Martin Bowman | Liberal |
Bruce South | Robert Edwin Clapp | Conservative |
Cardwell | Edward Alfred Little[nb 2] | Conservative |
Alexander Ferguson (1906) | Conservative | |
Carleton | George Nelson Kidd[nb 3] | Conservative |
Robert Herbert McElroy (1907) | Conservative | |
Dufferin | Frederick William Lewis[nb 3] | Conservative |
Charles Robert McKeown (1907) | Conservative | |
Dundas | James Pliny Whitney | Conservative |
Durham East | Josiah Johnston Preston | Conservative |
Durham West | John Henry Devitt | Conservative |
Elgin East | Charles Andrew Brower | Conservative |
Elgin West | Findlay George MacDiarmid | Conservative |
Essex North | Joseph Octave Reaume | Conservative |
Essex South | John Allan Auld | Liberal |
Fort William and Lake of the Woods | Thomas Smellie | Conservative |
Frontenac | John S. Gallagher | Conservative |
Glengarry | John Angus McMillan | Liberal |
Grenville | George Howard Ferguson | Conservative |
Grey Centre | Isaac Benson Lucas | Conservative |
Grey North | Alexander Grant MacKay | Liberal |
Grey South | David Jamieson | Conservative |
Haldimand | Jacob Kohler | Liberal |
Halton | Alfred Westland Nixon | Conservative |
Hamilton East | Henry Carscallen[nb 4] | Conservative |
Allan Studholme (1906) | Labour | |
Hamilton West | John Strathearn Hendrie | Conservative |
Hastings East | Edward Walter Rathbun | Independent Liberal |
Hastings North | Josiah Williams Pearce | Conservative |
Hastings West | Marshall Bidwell Morrison | Conservative |
Huron East | Archibald Hislop | Liberal |
Huron South | Henry Eilber | Conservative |
Huron West | Malcolm Graeme Cameron | Liberal |
Kent East | Philip Henry Bowyer | Conservative |
Kent West | Archibald Blake McCoig | Liberal |
Kingston | Edward John Barker Pense | Liberal |
Lambton East | Hugh Montgomery | Conservative |
Lambton West | William John Hanna | Conservative |
Lanark North | Richard Franklin Preston | Conservative |
Lanark South | Arthur James Matheson | Conservative |
Leeds | John Robertson Dargavel | Conservative |
Lennox | Thomas George Carscallen | Conservative |
Lincoln | Elisha Jessop | Conservative |
London | Adam Beck | Conservative |
Manitoulin | Robert Roswell Gamey | Conservative |
Middlesex East | George Wesley Neely | Conservative |
Middlesex North | Charles Constantine Hodgins | Conservative |
Middlesex West | George William Ross[nb 5] | Liberal |
Duncan Campbell Ross (1907) | Liberal | |
Monck | Richard Harcourt | Liberal |
Muskoka | Arthur Arnold Mahaffy | Conservative |
Nipissing East | Charles Lamarche[nb 6] | Conservative |
Francis Cochrane (1905) | Conservative | |
Nipissing West | Azaire Adulphe Aubin | Conservative |
Norfolk North | Thomas Robert Atkinson | Liberal |
Norfolk South | Arthur Clarence Pratt | Conservative |
Northumberland East | William Arnson Willoughby | Conservative |
Northumberland West | Samuel Clarke | Liberal |
Ontario North | William Henry Hoyle | Conservative |
Ontario South | Charles Calder | Conservative |
Ottawa[nb 7] | George Samuel May | Liberal |
Ottawa | Donald Joseph McDougal | Liberal |
Oxford North | James S. Munro | Liberal |
Oxford South | Donald Sutherland | Conservative |
Parry Sound | John Galna | Conservative |
Peel | John Smith | Liberal |
Perth North | James Torrance | Conservative |
Perth South | Samuel Nelson Monteith | Conservative |
Peterborough East | William A. Anderson | Liberal |
Peterborough West | Thomas Evans Bradburn | Conservative |
Port Arthur and Rainy River | Hugh W. Kennedy | Liberal |
William Alfred Preston (1907) | Conservative | |
Prescott | Joseph Louis Labrosse | Liberal |
Prince Edward | Morley Currie | Liberal |
Renfrew North | Edward Arunah Dunlop | Conservative |
Renfrew South | Thomas William McGarry | Conservative |
Russell | Damase Racine | Liberal |
Sault Ste. Marie | Charles Napier Smith | Liberal |
Simcoe Centre | Alfred Burke Thompson | Conservative |
Simcoe East | James Brockett Tudhope | Liberal |
Simcoe West | James Stoddart Duff | Conservative |
Stormont | George Kerr | Conservative |
Toronto East | Robert Allan Pyne | Conservative |
Toronto North | William Beattie Nesbitt | Conservative |
William Kirkpatrick McNaught (1906) | Conservative | |
Toronto South | J.J. Foy | Conservative |
Toronto West | Thomas Crawford | Conservative |
Victoria East | John Hilliard Carnegie | Conservative |
Victoria West | Samuel John Fox | Conservative |
Waterloo North | Henry George Lackner | Conservative |
Waterloo South | George Pattinson | Conservative |
Welland | Evan Eugene Fraser | Conservative |
Wellington East | James J. Craig | Conservative |
Wellington South | Joseph Patrick Downey | Conservative |
Wellington West | James Tucker | Conservative |
Wentworth North | Robert Adam Thompson | Liberal |
Wentworth South | Daniel Reed | Liberal |
York East | Alexander McCowan | Conservative |
York North | Thomas Herbert Lennox | Conservative |
York West | Joseph Wesley St. John[nb 3] | Conservative |
Forbes Godfrey (1907) | Conservative |
Notes
- elected to federal seat
- resigned to accept appointment
- died in 1907
- died in 1906
- named to Senate
- resigned his seat
- Ottawa had 2 seats
References
- A History of Ontario : its resources and development., Alexander Fraser
- Members in Parliament 11 Archived 2007-09-30 at the Wayback Machine
- "Speakers of the Legislative Assembly of Ontario". Legislative Assembly of Ontario. Archived from the original on 2014-08-01. Retrieved 2014-08-28.
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