8th Parliament of Ontario
The 8th Legislative Assembly of Ontario was in session from June 26, 1894, until January 28, 1898, just prior to the 1898 general election. The majority party was the Ontario Liberal Party led by Oliver Mowat. Arthur Sturgis Hardy succeeded Mowat as Premier in 1896 after Mowat entered federal politics. The Assembly also had significant groupings from the Patrons of Industry (representing farmers' interests) and the Protestant Protective Association (representing anti-Catholic sentiment, and associated with the Orange Order), each of which returned candidates either on their own or with local Liberal or Conservative support.
William Douglas Balfour served as Speaker for the assembly until he was named to cabinet on July 14, 1896. [1] Alfred Évanturel succeeded him as Speaker.[2]
Members elected to the Assembly
Addington: James Reid
Algoma East: Charles Franklin Farwell
Algoma West: James M. Savage
Brockville: George Augustus Dana
Bruce Centre: John Stevenson McDonald (Lib-Pat)
Bruce North: Daniel McNaughton (Lib-PPA)
Bruce South: Reuben Eldridge Truax
Cardwell: 'Edward Alfred Little (Con-Pat)
Dufferin: William Dynes
Durham East: William Armstrong Fallis
Durham West: William Henry Reid (Con-PPA)
Elgin East: Charles Andrew Brower
Elgin West: Donald Macnish (Lib-Pat)
Essex North: William J. McKee
Essex South: William Douglas Balfour
Frontenac: Joseph Longford Haycock (Lib-Pat)
Glengarry: David Murdoch McPherson (Lib-Pat)
Grenville: Orlando Bush
Grey Centre: Thomas Gamey
Grey North: James Cleland
Grey South: David McNicol
Haldimand: John Senn
Halton: William Kerns
Hamilton East: James Taylor Middleton
Hastings East: Alexander McLaren (Lib-Pat)
Hastings North: James Haggerty |
Hastings West: William Hodgins Biggar
Huron East: Thomas Gibson
Huron South: Murdo Young McLean
Huron West: James Thompson Garrow
Kent East: Robert Ferguson
Kent West: Thomas Letson Pardo (Lib-Pat)
Kingston: Edward H. Smythe
Lambton East: Peter Duncan McCallum (Ind-Con-PPA)
Lambton West: Alfred Thomas Gurd (Con-PPA)
Lanark North: Richard Franklin Preston
Lanark South: Arthur James Matheson
Leeds: Walter Beatty
Lennox: Walter William Meacham
Lincoln: James Hiscott
Middlesex East: William Shore (Lib-PPA)
Middlesex North: William Taylor (Lib-Pat)
Monck: Richard Harcourt
Muskoka: George Edward Langford (Con-PPA)
Norfolk North: Edwin Clarendon Carpenter
Norfolk South: William Andrew Charlton
Northumberland East: William Arnson Willoughby
Northumberland West: Corelli Collard Field
Ontario North: Thomas William Chapple
Ontario South: John Dryden
Oxford South: Angus McKay
Parry Sound: William Rabb Beatty (Lib-Pat) |
Peel: John Smith
Perth North: Thomas Magwood
Perth South: John McNeill (Lib-Pat)
Peterborough East: Thomas Blezard
Peterborough West: James Robert Stratton
Prescott: Alfred Evanturel
Prince Edward: John Caven (Lib-Pat)
Renfrew North: Henry Barr
Renfrew South: 'Robert Adam Campbell
Russell: Alexander Robillard
Simcoe Centre: Robert Paton
Simcoe East: Andrew Miscampbell
Simcoe West: Archibald S. Currie (Lib-Pat)
Stormont: John Bennett (Lib-Pat)
Toronto East: George Ryerson (Con-PPA)
Toronto North: George Frederick Marter
Toronto South: Oliver Aiken Howland
Toronto West: Thomas Crawford
Victoria East: John Hilliard Carnegie
Victoria West: John McKay
Waterloo North: Alexander Black Robertson
Waterloo South: John Douglas Moore
Wellington East: John Craig
Wellington South: John Mutrie
Wellington West: George Tucker (Con-PPA)
Wentworth North: John Ira Flatt
Wentworth South: Nicholas Awrey
York East: John Richardson
York North: Elihu James Davis
|
- returned two members
Timeline
Party | 1894 | Gain/(loss) due to | 1898 | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Void election |
Resignation as MPP |
Death in office |
Byelection gain |
Byelection hold | ||||
Liberal | 45 | (1) | (3) | (1) | 4 | 5 | 49 | |
Conservative | 23 | (3) | (1) | 1 | 20 | |||
Liberal-Patrons | 12 | 12 | ||||||
Conservative–P.P.A. | 5 | (1) | 4 | |||||
Patrons of Industry | 3 | 3 | ||||||
Conservative-Patrons | 2 | 2 | ||||||
Liberal-P.P.A. | 2 | 2 | ||||||
Protestant Protective Association | 1 | 1 | ||||||
Independent-Conservative-PPA | 1 | 1 | ||||||
Total | 94 | (5) | (4) | (1) | 5 | 5 | 94 |
Seat | Before | Change | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Date | Member | Party | Reason | Date | Member | Party | |||
London | October 25, 1894 | William Ralph Meredith | Conservative | Appointed to Bench | November 20, 1894 | Thomas Saunders Hobbs | Liberal | ||
Algoma West | December 20, 1894 | James M. Savage | Conservative | Election declared void | January 29, 1895 | James Conmee | Liberal | ||
Kingston | December 27, 1894[3] | Edward H. Smythe | Conservative | Election declared void | January 28, 1895 | William Harty | Liberal | ||
Wellington West | January 29, 1895[a 1] | George Tucker | Conservative–P.P.A. | Election declared void | February 1, 1896 | James Tucker[a 2] | Conservative | ||
Haldimand | February 27, 1895[4] | John Senn | Conservative | Election declared void | March 19, 1895 | Jacob Baxter | Liberal | ||
Brant North | April 23, 1895 | William Bruce Wood | Liberal | Appointed Registrar of Brant County | May 20, 1895[a 3] | Daniel Burt | Liberal | ||
Kingston | September 20, 1895 | William Harty | Liberal | Election declared void | October 8, 1895[a 3] | William Harty | Liberal | ||
Wentworth South | December 26, 1895[5] | Nicholas Awrey | Liberal | Appointed Sheriff of Wentworth County | January 24, 1896 | John Dickenson | Liberal | ||
Oxford North | July 14, 1896 | Oliver Mowat | Liberal | Appointed to the Senate | September 7, 1896 | Andrew Pattulo | Liberal | ||
Essex South | August 19, 1896 | William Douglas Balfour | Liberal | Died in office | October 20, 1896 | John Allan Auld | Liberal |
- dismissed on appeal, November 29, 1895
- brother of George Tucker
- returned by acclamation
External links
References
- Balfour died shortly afterwards on August 19, 1896.
- "Speakers of the Legislative Assembly of Ontario". Legislative Assembly of Ontario. Archived from the original on 2014-08-01. Retrieved 2014-08-29.
- "Dr. Smythe Unseated". Weekly British Whig. December 20, 1894. p. 1.
- "Editorial Notes". Waterloo County Chronicle. February 28, 1895. p. 4.
- "General Paragraphs". Daily British Whig. January 4, 1896. p. 1.