29th Parliament of Ontario
The 29th Legislative Assembly of Ontario was in session from October 21, 1971, until August 11, 1975, just prior to the 1975 general election. The majority party was the Ontario Progressive Conservative Party led by Bill Davis.
Allan Edward Reuter served as speaker for the assembly until October 22, 1974. Russell Daniel Rowe succeeded Reuter as speaker.[1]
Riding | Member | Party | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Algoma | Bernt Gilbertson | Progressive Conservative | |
Algoma—Manitoulin | John Gordon Lane | Progressive Conservative | |
Armourdale | Gordon Carton | Progressive Conservative | |
Beaches—Woodbine | Thomas Alfred Wardle | Progressive Conservative | |
Bellwoods | John Yaremko | Progressive Conservative | |
Brant | Robert Fletcher Nixon | Liberal | |
Brantford | Richard B. Beckett | Progressive Conservative | |
Carleton | Sid Handleman | Progressive Conservative | |
Carleton East | Albert Benjamin Rutter Lawrence | Progressive Conservative | Resigned in 1974 |
Paul Frederick Taylor (1974) | Liberal | Elected in a by-election in 1974 | |
Chatham—Kent | William Darcy McKeough | Progressive Conservative | |
Cochrane North | René Brunelle | Progressive Conservative | |
Cochrane South | Bill Ferrier | New Democratic | |
Don Mills | Dennis Roy Timbrell | Progressive Conservative | |
Dovercourt | George Adam Nixon | Progressive Conservative | |
Downsview | Vernon Milton Singer | Liberal | |
Dufferin—Simcoe | Alfred Wallace Downer | Progressive Conservative | |
Durham | Hugh Alex Carruthers | Progressive Conservative | |
Eglinton | Leonard Mackenzie Reilly | Progressive Conservative | |
Elgin | Ronald Keith McNeil | Progressive Conservative | |
Essex South | Donald Alexander Paterson | Liberal | |
Essex—Kent | Dick Ruston | Liberal | |
Etobicoke | Leonard A. Braithwaite | Liberal | |
Fort William | James Hugh Jessiman | Progressive Conservative | |
Frontenac—Addington | Wilmer John Nuttall | Progressive Conservative | |
Glengarry | Osie Villeneuve | Progressive Conservative | |
Grenville—Dundas | Donald Roy Irvine | Progressive Conservative | |
Grey South | Eric Alfred Winkler | Progressive Conservative | |
Grey—Bruce | Edward Carson Sargent | Liberal | |
Haldimand—Norfolk | James Noble Allan | Progressive Conservative | |
Halton West | George Albert Kerr | Progressive Conservative | |
Halton East | James Wilfred Snow | Progressive Conservative | |
Hamilton Centre | Norman Andrew Davison | New Democratic | |
Hamilton East | Reg Gisborn | New Democratic | |
Hamilton Mountain | John Roxborough Smith | Progressive Conservative | |
Hamilton West | Jack McNie | Progressive Conservative | |
Hastings | Clarke Rollins | Progressive Conservative | |
High Park | Morton Shulman | New Democratic | |
Humber | Nicholas Georges Leluk | Progressive Conservative | |
Huron | Charles Steel MacNaughton | Progressive Conservative | |
John Keith Riddell (1973) | Liberal | ||
Huron—Bruce | Murray Gaunt | Liberal | |
Kenora | Leo Edward Bernier | Progressive Conservative | |
Kent | John Purvis Spence | Liberal | |
Kingston and the Islands | Charles Joseph Sylvanus Apps | Progressive Conservative | |
Kitchener | James Roos Breithaupt | Liberal | |
Lakeshore | Patrick Lawlor | New Democratic | |
Lambton | Lorne Charles Henderson | Progressive Conservative | |
Lanark | Douglas Jack Wiseman | Progressive Conservative | |
Leeds | James Auld | Progressive Conservative | |
Lincoln | Robert Stanley Welch | Progressive Conservative | |
London North | Gordon Wayne Walker | Progressive Conservative | |
London South | John Howard White | Progressive Conservative | |
Middlesex North | William Atcheson Stewart | Progressive Conservative | |
Middlesex South | Robert Gordon Eaton | Progressive Conservative | |
Muskoka | Frank Stuart Miller | Progressive Conservative | |
Niagara Falls | John Twining Clement | Progressive Conservative | |
Nickel Belt | Floyd Laughren | New Democratic | |
Nipissing | Richard Stanley Smith | Liberal | |
Northumberland | Russell Daniel Rowe | Progressive Conservative | |
Ontario | Matthew Bulloch Dymond | Progressive Conservative | |
Ontario South | Bill Newman | Progressive Conservative | |
Oshawa | Charles Elmer McIlveen | Progressive Conservative | |
Ottawa Centre | Michael Morris Cassidy | New Democratic | |
Ottawa East | Albert J. Roy | Liberal | |
Ottawa South | Claude Frederick Bennett | Progressive Conservative | |
Ottawa West | Donald Hugo Morrow | Progressive Conservative | |
Oxford | Harry Craig Parrott | Progressive Conservative | |
Parkdale | Jan Dukszta | New Democratic | |
Parry Sound | Lorne Maeck | Progressive Conservative | |
Peel North | William Grenville Davis | Progressive Conservative | |
Peel South | Robert Douglas Kennedy | Progressive Conservative | |
Perth | Hugh Alden Edighoffer | Liberal | |
Peterborough | John Melville Turner | Progressive Conservative | |
Port Arthur | James Francis Foulds | New Democratic | |
Prescott and Russell | Joseph Albert Bélanger | Progressive Conservative | |
Prince Edward—Lennox | James A. Taylor | Progressive Conservative | |
Quinte | Richard Thomas Potter | Progressive Conservative | |
Rainy River | T. Patrick Reid | Liberal-Labour | |
Renfrew North | Maurice Hamilton | Progressive Conservative | |
Renfrew South | Paul Joseph Yakabuski | Progressive Conservative | |
Riverdale | Jim Renwick | New Democratic | |
Sandwich—Riverside | Fred Burr | New Democratic | |
Sarnia | James Edward Bullbrook | Liberal | |
Sault Ste. Marie | John Rhodes | Progressive Conservative | |
Scarborough Centre | James Francis Drea | Progressive Conservative | |
Scarborough East | Margaret Birch | Progressive Conservative | |
Scarborough North | Thomas Leonard Wells | Progressive Conservative | |
Scarborough West | Stephen Henry Lewis | New Democratic | |
Simcoe Centre | David Arthur Evans | Progressive Conservative | |
Simcoe East | Gordon Elsworth Smith | Progressive Conservative | |
St. Andrew—St. Patrick | Allan Grossman | Progressive Conservative | |
St. Catharines | Robert Mercer Johnston | Progressive Conservative | |
St. David | Margaret Scrivener | Progressive Conservative | |
St. George | Allan Frederick Lawrence[nb 1] | Progressive Conservative | |
Margaret Campbell (1973) | Liberal | ||
Stormont | Fernand Guindon | Progressive Conservative | Resigned in 1974 |
George Samis | New Democratic | Elected in a by-election in 1974 | |
Sudbury | Melville Carlyle Germa | New Democratic | |
Sudbury East | Elie Walter Martel | New Democratic | |
Thunder Bay | John Edward Stokes | New Democratic | |
Timiskaming | Edward Michael Havrot | Progressive Conservative | |
Victoria—Haliburton | Ronald Glen Hodgson | Progressive Conservative | |
Waterloo North | Edward R. Good | Liberal | |
Waterloo South | Allan Edward Reuter | Progressive Conservative | |
Welland | Ellis Price Morningstar | Progressive Conservative | |
Welland South | Raymond Louis Haggerty | Liberal | |
Wellington South | Harry A. Worton | Liberal | |
Wellington—Dufferin | John Henry Haines Root | Progressive Conservative | |
Wentworth | Ian Deans | New Democratic | |
Wentworth North | Donald William Ewen | Progressive Conservative | |
Windsor West | Edwin James Bounsall | New Democratic | |
Windsor—Walkerville | Bernard Newman | Liberal | |
York Centre | Donald MacKay Deacon | Liberal | |
York East | Arthur Meen | Progressive Conservative | |
York Mills | Dalton Arthur Bales | Progressive Conservative | |
York North | William Marshall Chamberlain Hodgson | Progressive Conservative | |
York South | Donald Cameron MacDonald | New Democratic | |
York West | John Palmer MacBeth | Progressive Conservative | |
York-Forest Hill | Philip Gerard Givens | Liberal | |
Yorkview | Fred Matthews Young | New Democratic |
Notes
- elected to federal seat
References
- "Speakers of the Legislative Assembly of Ontario". Legislative Assembly of Ontario. Archived from the original on 2014-08-01. Retrieved 2014-08-29.
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