18th Parliament of Ontario
The 18th Legislative Assembly of Ontario was in session from October 30, 1929, until May 16, 1934, just prior to the 1934 general election. The majority party was the Ontario Conservative Party led by George Howard Ferguson.
George Stewart Henry replaced Ferguson as party leader and Premier in December 1930 after Ferguson was named Canadian High Commissioner in London.
Thomas Ashmore Kidd served as speaker for the assembly.[1]
Members elected to the Assembly
Italicized names indicate members returned by acclamation.
Addington: William David Black
Algoma: John Morrow Robb
Beaches: Thomas Alexander Murphy
Bellwoods: Thomas Hamilton Bell
Bracondale: Arthur Russell Nesbitt
Brantford: William George Martin
Brockton: Frederick George McBrien
Brockville: Hezekiah Allan Clark
Bruce North: Frederick Wellington Elliott
Cochrane North: Albert Victor Waters
Cochrane South: Alfred Franklin Kenning
Dovercourt: Samuel Thomas Wright
Dufferin: Thomas Kerr Slack (Prog)
Dundas: George Holmes Challies
Durham: William John Bragg
Eglinton: Alvin Coulter McLean
Elgin East: Herbert James Davis
Elgin West: Charles Edmund Raven
Essex North: Paul Poisson
Essex South: Austin Burton Smith
Fort William: Franklin Harford Spence
Frontenac—Lennox: Charles Wesley Hambly
Glengarry: James Alexander Sangster
Greenwood: George Joseph Smith
Grey North: David James Taylor (Prog)
Grey South: Farquhar Robert Oliver (UFO)
Haldimand: Richard Nixon Berry
Halton: Thomas Aston Blakelock
Hamilton East: William Morrison
Hamilton West: Frederick Thomas Smye
Hastings East: James Ferguson Hill
Hastings North: John Robert Cooke
Hastings West: William Henry Ireland |
High Park: William Alexander Baird
Huron North: Charles Alexander Robertson
Huron South: William George Medd (Prog)
Kenora: Earl Hutchinson
Kent East: Philip James Henry
Kent West: Archibald Clement Calder
Kingston: Thomas Ashmore Kidd
Lambton East: Thomas Howard Fraleigh
Lambton West: Andrew Robinson McMillen
Lanark North: John Alexander Craig
Lanark South: James Alexander Anderson
Leeds: Frederick James Skinner
Lincoln: Sidney James Wilson
London North: James Percy Moore
London South: John Cameron Wilson
Manitoulin: Alvin Edwin Graham
Middlesex North: Fred Van Wyck Laughton
Middlesex West: Lloyd William Morgan Freele
Muskoka: George Walter Ecclestone
Niagara Falls: William Gore Willson
Norfolk: John Strickler Martin
Northumberland: Frederick John McArthur
Ontario North: James Blanchard
Ontario South: William Edmund Newton Sinclair
Ottawa North: Albert Edwin Honeywell
Oxford North: David Munroe Ross (L-Prog)
Oxford South: Robert Andrew Baxter
Parkdale: William Herbert Price
Parry Sound: George Vernon Harcourt
Perth North: Joseph Dunsmore Monteith
Perth South: David Bonis
Peterborough City: James Fordyce Strickland
Peterborough County: Thomas Percival Lancaster
Port Arthur: Donald McDonald Hogarth |
Prescott: Joseph St. Denis (I-Con)
Prince Edward: Horace Stanley Colliver
Rainy River: William Herbert Elliott (I-Con)
Renfrew North: Edward Arunah Dunlop
Renfrew South: Thomas Patrick Murray
Riverdale: George Oakley
Russell: Charles Avila Séguin
St. Andrew: Ephraim Frederick Singer
St. Catharines: Edwin Cyrus Graves
St. David: Wilfred Heighington
St. George: Henry Scholfield
St. Patrick: Edward Joseph Murphy
Simcoe Centre: Leonard Jennett Simpson
Simcoe East: William Finlayson
Simcoe Southwest: James Edgar Jamieson
Stormont: Duncan Alexander McNaughton
Sturgeon Falls: Albert Zenophile Aubin
Timiskaming: Angus John Kennedy
Victoria North: William Newman
Victoria South: Wellesley Wilson Staples
Waterloo North: Sydney Charles Tweed
Waterloo South: Karl Kenneth Homuth
Wellington Northeast: George Alexander McQuibban
Wellington South: Lincoln Goldie
Wentworth North: Alex Laurence Shaver
Wentworth South: Thomas Joseph Mahony
Windsor East: Frank Worthington Wilson
Windsor West: John Frederick Reid
Woodbine: George Sylvester Shields
York North: Clifford Case
York South: Leopold Macaulay
|
- election deferred to November 27, 1929, due to the death of Alexander Patterson Mewhinney the day before Election Day
Timeline
Party | 1929 | Gain/(loss) due to | 1934 | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Death in office |
Resignation as MPP |
Byelection gain |
Byelection hold | ||||
Conservative | 90 | (9) | (3) | 7 | 85 | ||
Liberal | 13 | 3 | 16 | ||||
Progressive | 4 | 4 | |||||
Liberal–Progressive | 1 | 1 | |||||
United Farmers | 1 | 1 | |||||
Labour | 1 | 1 | |||||
Independent-Conservative | 2 | 2 | |||||
Vacant | – | 2 | 2 | ||||
Total | 112 | (7) | (3) | 3 | 7 | 112 |
Seat | Before | Change | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Date | Member | Party | Reason | Date | Member | Party | |
Nipissing | June 30, 1930 | Henri Morel | █ Conservative | Chose to stand for Nipissing in the 1930 federal election | October 29, 1930 | Charles Robert Harrison | █ Conservative |
Lanark South | August 3, 1930 | James Alexander Anderson | █ Conservative | Died in office | October 29, 1930 | Egerton Reuben Stedman | █ Conservative |
Waterloo South | July 12, 1930 | Karl Kenneth Homuth | █ Conservative | Chose to stand for Waterloo North in the 1930 federal election | October 29, 1930 | Norman Otto Hipel | █ Liberal |
Perth South | July 19, 1930 | David Bonis | █ Conservative | Died in office | October 29, 1930 | Charles Edward Richardson | █ Conservative |
Hamilton West | November 15, 1930 | Frederick Thomas Smye | █ Conservative | Died in office | February 11, 1931 | D'Arcy Argue Counsell Martin | █ Conservative |
Grenville | December 15, 1930 | George Howard Ferguson | █ Conservative | Appointed Canadian High Commissioner in London | February 11, 1931 | James Alfred Sanderson | █ Conservative |
Norfolk | May 13, 1931 | John Strickler Martin | █ Conservative | Died in office | July 8, 1931 | Arthur Campbell Burt | █ Conservative |
Wellington South | September 19, 1931 | Lincoln Goldie | █ Conservative | Died in office | November 18, 1931 | Duncan Paul Munro | █ Liberal |
York West | January 6, 1932 | Forbes Godfrey | █ Conservative | Died in office | May 28, 1932 | Henry Isaac Price | █ Conservative |
Kent East | August 13, 1933 | Philip James Henry | █ Conservative | Died in office | January 3, 1934 | Douglas Munro Campbell | █ Liberal |
Renfrew North | January 1, 1934 | Edward Arunah Dunlop | █ Conservative | Died in office | █ Vacant | ||
Perth North | January 8, 1934 | Joseph Dunsmore Monteith | █ Conservative | Died in office | █ Vacant |
External links
- Members in Parliament 18 Archived 2011-06-11 at the Wayback Machine
References
- "Speakers of the Legislative Assembly of Ontario". Legislative Assembly of Ontario. Archived from the original on 2014-08-01. Retrieved 2014-08-27.
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