16th Parliament of Ontario
The 16th Legislative Assembly of Ontario was in session from June 25, 1923, until October 18, 1926, just prior to the 1926 general election. The majority party was the Ontario Conservative Party led by George Howard Ferguson.
The United Farmers of Ontario party, who had held the balance of power in the preceding assembly, lost most of their seats to Conservatives.
The Liberals led by Wellington Hay were recognized as the Official Opposition following the 1923 election by the governing Conservatives, despite the fact that the United Farmers of Ontario had more seats. According to historian Peter Oliver, this was an arbitrary decision without basis in precedent or law. Conservative Premier G. Howard Ferguson used as justification an announcement by UFO general secretary James J. Morrison that the UFO would be withdrawing from party politics, though Oliver argues that this was facetious logic. UFO parliamentary leader Manning Doherty protested the decision, but to no avail.[1] In the course of the parliament, most UFO MLAs reorganized themselves as the Progressive Party under the leadership of first Manning Doherty and then William Raney, with only Beniah Bowman and Leslie Warner Oke continuing as UFO MLAs.
Joseph Elijah Thompson served as speaker for the assembly.[2]
Members elected to the Assembly
Listing reflects the UFO/Progressive split in 1924. Italicized names indicate members returned by acclamation.
Addington: William David Black
Algoma: Arthur Gladstone Wallis
Brant South: Morrison Mann MacBride
Brockville: Hezekiah Allan Clark
Bruce North: William Henry Fenton (Prog)
Bruce South: Malcolm Alex McCallum (Prog)
Bruce West: Alexander Patterson Mewhinney
Cochrane: Malcolm Lang
Dufferin: Charles Robert McKeown
Dundas: Aaron Sweet
Durham East: Albert James Fallis
Durham West: William John Bragg
Elgin East: Michael McKnight
Elgin West: Findlay George MacDiarmid
Essex North: Edward Philip Tellier
Essex South: Adolphus T. Armstrong
Fort William: Franklin Harford Spence
Frontenac: Anthony McGuin Rankin
Glengarry: James Alexander Sangster
Grey Centre: Dougall Carmichael (Prog)
Grey North: David James Taylor (Prog)
Grey South: David Jamieson
Haldimand: Richard Nixon Berry
Halton: George Hillmer
Hamilton East: Leeming Carr
Hamilton West: Arthur Campbell Garden
Hastings East: James Ferguson Hill
Hastings North: John Robert Cooke
Hastings West: William Henry Ireland
Huron Centre: Ebon Rinaldo Wigle
Huron North: John Joynt
Huron South: Nelson William Trewartha
Kenora: Peter Heenan
Kent East: Manning William Doherty (Prog) |
Kent West: Robert Livingstone Brackin
Kingston: William Folger Nickle
Lambton East: Leslie Warner Oke (UFO)
Lambton West: Wilfred Smith Haney
Lanark North: Thomas Alfred Thompson
Lanark South: Egerton Reuben Stedman
Leeds: Andrew Wellington Gray
Lennox: John Perry Vrooman
Lincoln: Robert Henry Kemp (Prog)
Manitoulin: Beniah Bowman (UFO)
Middlesex East: John Willard Freeborn (Prog)
Middlesex North: George Adam Elliott
Middlesex West: John Giles Lethbridge (Prog)
Muskoka: George Walter Ecclestone
Niagara Falls: William Gore Willson
Norfolk North: George David Sewell (Prog)
Norfolk South: John Strickler Martin
Northumberland East: James Franklin Beatty Belford
Northumberland West: Samuel Clarke
Ontario North: John Wesley Widdifield (Prog)
Ontario South: William Edmund Newton Sinclair
Oxford North: David Munroe Ross (Prog)
Oxford South: William Henry Chambers
Parkdale: William Herbert Price
Parry Sound: George Vernon Harcourt
Perth North: Joseph Dunsmore Monteith
Perth South: McCausland Irvine
Peterborough East: Thomas Dalton Johnston
Peterborough West: William Herbert Bradburn
Port Arthur: Francis Henry Keefer
Prescott: Edmond Proulx
Prince Edward: Horace Stanley Colliver |
Rainy River: John Fullarton Callan
Renfrew North: Alexander Stuart
Renfrew South: John Carty (Prog)
Riverdale: George Oakley
Russell: Aurélien Bélanger
St. Catharines: Edwin Cyrus Graves
Simcoe Centre: Charles Ernest Wright
Simcoe East: William Finlayson
Simcoe West: James Edgar Jamieson
Stormont: John Colborne Milligan
Sturgeon Falls: Zotique Mageau
Timiskaming: Angus John Kennedy
Toronto Northeast - A: Alexander Cameron Lewis
Toronto Northeast - B: Joseph Elijah Thompson
Toronto Northwest - A: Thomas Crawford
Toronto Northwest - B: Arthur Russell Nesbitt
Toronto Southeast - A: John Allister Currie
Toronto Southeast - B: Edward William James Owens
Toronto Southwest - A: James Arthur McCausland
Toronto Southwest - B: Frederick George McBrien
Victoria North: James Raglan Mark
Victoria South: Robert John Patterson
Waterloo North: William George Weichel
Waterloo South: Karl Kenneth Homuth
Wellington East: William Raney (Prog)
Wellington South: Lincoln Goldie
Wellington West: William Clarke Chambers
Wentworth North: Frank Campbell Biggs (Prog)
Wentworth South: Thomas Joseph Mahony
Windsor: Frank Worthington Wilson
York North: William Keith
|
Timeline
Party | 1923 | Gain/(loss) due to | 1926 | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Party split |
Death in office |
Resignation as MPP |
Byelection gain |
Byelection hold | ||||
Conservative | 75 | (1) | (2) | 1 | 1 | 74 | ||
United Farmers | 17 | (15) | (1) | 1 | ||||
Progressive | – | 15 | (4) | 11 | ||||
Liberal | 14 | (2) | (1) | 11 | ||||
Labour | 4 | (1) | 3 | |||||
Independent | 1 | 1 | ||||||
Vacant | – | 2 | 8 | 10 | ||||
Total | 111 | – | (1) | (1) | 1 | 1 | 111 |
Seat | Before | Change | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Date | Member | Party | Reason | Date | Member | Party | |
Lennox | August 23, 1923 | John Perry Vrooman | █ Liberal | Died in office | October 22, 1923 | Charles Wesley Hambly | █ Conservative |
Toronto Northwest - A | May 15, 1924 | Thomas Crawford | █ Conservative | Accepted provincial appointment | July 7, 1924 | William Henry Edwards | █ Conservative |
Simcoe South | April 14, 1925 | William Earl Rowe | █ Conservative | Resigned to run in 1925 federal election | █ Vacant | ||
Kenora | April 14, 1925 | Peter Heenan | █ Labour | Resigned to run in 1925 federal election | █ Vacant | ||
Cochrane | April 14, 1925 | Malcolm Lang | █ Liberal | Resigned to run in 1925 federal election | █ Vacant | ||
Norfolk North | April 14, 1925 | George David Sewell | █ Progressive | Resigned to run in 1925 federal election | █ Vacant | ||
Grey Centre | April 14, 1925 | Dougall Carmichael | █ Progressive | Resigned to run in 1925 federal election | █ Vacant | ||
Kent East | April 14, 1925 | Manning William Doherty | █ Progressive | Resigned seat to promote cooperative movement | █ Vacant | ||
London | August 15, 1925 | Adam Beck | █ Conservative | Died in office | █ Vacant | ||
Middlesex East | April 8, 1926 | John Willard Freeborn | █ Progressive | Resigned to run in 1926 federal election | █ Vacant | ||
Manitoulin | April 8, 1926 | Beniah Bowman | █ United Farmers | Resigned to run in 1926 federal election | █ Vacant | ||
Kent West | October 11, 1926 | Robert Livingstone Brackin | █ Liberal | Died in office | █ Vacant |
External links
- Members in Parliament 16 Archived 2011-06-11 at the Wayback Machine
References
- Peter Oliver, G. Howard Ferguson: Ontario Tory, (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1977), p. 158.)
- "Speakers of the Legislative Assembly of Ontario". Legislative Assembly of Ontario. Archived from the original on 2014-08-01. Retrieved 2014-08-27.