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Charles Stewart (premier)

Charles Stewart, PC (August 26, 1868 – December 6, 1946) was a Canadian politician who served as the third premier of Alberta from 1917 until 1921. Born in Strabane, Ontario, in then Wentworth County (now part of Hamilton), Stewart was a farmer who moved west to Alberta after his farm was destroyed by a storm. There he became active in politics and was elected to the Legislative Assembly of Alberta in the 1909 election. He served as Minister of Public Works and Minister of Municipal Affairs—the first person to hold the latter position in Alberta—in the government of Arthur Sifton. When Sifton left provincial politics in 1917 to join the federal cabinet, Stewart was named his replacement.

Charles Stewart
3rd Premier of Alberta
In office
October 30, 1917 – August 13, 1921
MonarchGeorge V
Lieutenant GovernorRobert Brett
Preceded byArthur Sifton
Succeeded byHerbert Greenfield
Member of the Legislative Assembly of Alberta for Sedgewick
In office
March 22, 1909 – February 28, 1922
Preceded byNew district
Succeeded byAlbert Andrews
Alberta Minister of Railways and Telephones
In office
October 16, 1917 – August 31, 1921
Preceded byArthur Sifton
Succeeded byVernor Smith
Alberta Provincial Secretary
In office
October 16, 1917 – August 28, 1918
Preceded byArchibald J. McLean
Succeeded byWilfrid Gariépy
Alberta Minister of Public Works
In office
November 28, 1913 – October 16, 1917
Preceded byCharles R. Mitchell
Succeeded byArchibald J. McLean
Alberta Minister of Municipal Affairs
In office
May 4, 1912 – November 29, 1913
Preceded byNew position
Succeeded byWilfrid Gariépy
Member of the House of Commons of Canada for Edmonton West
In office
October 29, 1925 – October 14, 1935
Preceded byDonald MacBeth Kennedy
Succeeded byJames Angus MacKinnon
Member of the House of Commons of Canada for Argenteuil
In office
February 28, 1922 – October 29, 1925
Preceded byPeter Robert McGibbon
Succeeded byGeorge Perley
Canadian Minister of the Interior and Mines
In office
December 29, 1921 – June 29, 1926
Preceded byJames Alexander Lougheed
Succeeded byHenry Herbert Stevens
In office
September 25, 1926 – August 6, 1930
Preceded byR. B. Bennett
Succeeded byWesley Ashton Gordon
Personal details
BornAugust 26, 1868
Strabane, Wentworth County, Ontario, Canada
DiedDecember 6, 1946(1946-12-06) (aged 78)
Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
Political partyAlberta Liberal Party
Liberal Party of Canada
SpouseJane Russell Sneath
Children8
ProfessionFarmer
Signature

As premier, Stewart tried to hold together his Liberal Party, which was divided by the Conscription Crisis of 1917. He endeavoured to enforce prohibition of alcoholic beverages, which had been enshrined in law by a referendum during Sifton's premiership, but found that the law was not widely enough supported to be effectively policed. His government took over several of the province's financially troubled railroads, and guaranteed bonds sold to fund irrigation projects. Several of these policies were the result of lobbying by the United Farmers of Alberta (UFA), with which Stewart enjoyed good relations; even so, the UFA was politicized during Stewart's premiership and ran candidates in the 1921 election. Unable to match the UFA's appeal to rural voters, Stewart's government was defeated at the polls and he was succeeded as premier by Herbert Greenfield.

After leaving provincial politics, Stewart was invited to join the federal cabinet of William Lyon Mackenzie King, in which he served as Minister of the Interior and Mines. In this capacity he signed, on behalf of the federal government, an agreement that transferred control of Alberta's natural resources from Ottawa to the provincial government—a concession he had been criticized for being unable to negotiate as Premier. He served in King's cabinet until 1930, when the King government was defeated, but remained a member of Parliament until he lost his seat in 1935. He died in December 1946 in Ottawa.

Early life edit

Charles Stewart was born on August 26, 1868, in Strabane, Ontario, on Wentworth County, to Charles and Catherine Stewart. Charles Sr. was a stonemason and farmer.[1] As a child, Charles Jr. accompanied his father to Carlisle to hear Canadian Prime Minister Sir John A. Macdonald. According to family lore, Macdonald noticed the young future Premier and told him that he was a fine boy who would make a good politician someday. When Charles Jr. was 16, he moved with his family to a farm near Barrie. Seven years later, on December 17, 1891, he married Jane Russell Sneath;[1] the pair had eight children.[2] After marrying Sneath, he converted to her Church of England faith.[2]

 
Stewart's farmhouse in Killam; Stewart himself is standing at lower left.

In 1892, Charles Sr. died, leaving his son in charge of the family farm. In 1905, on July 8, this farm was destroyed by a tornado,[3] and Stewart decided to move west, settling near Killam, Alberta in 1906. His family endured a cold winter—the warmest place in their shack was on the kitchen table, so they kept the baby there—and in the spring their crops were destroyed by hail. As he was unsuccessful at farming, he supplemented his income using the stonemason's skills he had learned from his father: he laid foundations for the Canadian Pacific Railway, worked on the High Level Bridge in Edmonton, and dug Killam's town well. He later worked in real estate and as a farm implement dealer, earning enough to buy a new and larger homestead in 1912.[1]

Stewart was active in his local community: he was the first chair of the Killam School District, attended the first meeting of Killam ratepayers on January 19, 1907, and was involved in the incorporation of Killam in January 1908. In 1909, the Alberta Liberal Party, which had dominated provincial politics throughout Alberta's short history, came seeking a candidate to run in the new riding of Sedgewick. Stewart agreed to run and was elected by acclamation in the 1909 election.[4]

Early political career edit

At the time of Stewart's acclamation, Premier Alexander Cameron Rutherford seemed unassailable: he controlled 36 of the Legislative Assembly of Alberta's 41 seats (Stewart's being one),[4] and his Liberals had just won nearly sixty percent of the vote in their re-election bid.[5] Months later, however, Rutherford and his government were embroiled in the Alberta and Great Waterways Railway scandal, and the Liberal Party was split.[4] Initially, Stewart remained loyal to Rutherford, and went so far as to allege in the legislature that insurgent Liberal John R. Boyle had offered two members of the legislative assembly (MLAs), who were also hotel keepers, immunity from prosecution for liquor violations if they would support a new government in which Boyle was Attorney-General.[6] As additional details of the scandal emerged, however, Stewart himself became an insurgent, and was pleased when Arthur Sifton replaced Rutherford as Premier.[4]

In May 1912, Sifton expanded his cabinet, and Stewart was made the province's first Minister of Municipal Affairs.[7] As was required by the custom of the day when an MLA was appointed to cabinet, he resigned his seat to run in a by-election, in which he easily defeated Conservative William John Blair.[8] In cabinet, he became known as an advocate of public ownership of utilities, which placed him more in sympathy with the Conservative opposition than with Sifton.[9] Despite this position, he backed Sifton's 1913 resolution to the Alberta and Great Waterways problem, which involved partnering with the private sector; this vote marked the first time that the Liberal caucus was united on the railways question since before the scandal broke in 1910.[10]

In December 1913, Sifton moved Stewart from Municipal Affairs into the Public Works portfolio; in this capacity, Stewart played a major role in the incorporation of the Alberta Farmers' Co-operative Elevator Company,[9] which was a farmer-run co-operative with a charter to own and operate grain elevators.[11]

Premier edit

Shortly after the 1917 provincial election (in which Stewart and the Liberals were both soundly re-elected), Canada found itself embroiled in a conscription crisis. The federal Conservative government, led by Robert Borden, supported implementing conscription.[12] The opposition Liberals, led by Wilfrid Laurier, nominally opposed conscription, but many English-speaking Liberals in fact supported it.[13] The crisis was resolved when Borden formed a Union government composed of Conservatives and pro-conscription Liberals.[14] Sifton, falling into the latter group, was chosen as Alberta's representative in that government, and resigned as Premier in October 1917. Lieutenant-Governor Robert Brett, accepting Sifton's choice of successor, asked Stewart to form a government.[12] His only serious rival for the position of premier was Charles Wilson Cross, who opposed conscription and was therefore not a palatable choice for much of the Liberal establishment.[9]

Party division edit

The Alberta and Great Waterways scandal had opened up a rift in the provincial Liberal Party, between those who remained loyal to Cross and Rutherford and those who did not, with the latter group being led by William Henry Cushing and Frank Oliver.[15] Sifton had papered over, if not in fact healed, this rift, and it did not burst open again until the conscription crisis.[14] This time, however, the fault lines were different: Cross and Oliver had put aside their longtime enmity to join in opposing conscription, and Sifton, who had been selected Premier in part because he was not identified with either faction in the old feud, was Alberta's most prominent pro-conscription Liberal.[13]

Stewart was a supporter of conscription and of the Union government,[16] but did not take any active part in the acrimonious 1917 federal election, which was fought on the issue. Several of his ministers were not so circumspect: Attorney-General Cross, Education Minister Boyle, and Municipal Affairs Minister Wilfrid Gariépy campaigned for the Laurier Liberals; Public Works Minister Archibald J. McLean and Treasurer Charles R. Mitchell stayed out of the fray while leaving no doubt of their support for Union.[13] During the first legislative session after this election, Stewart came under attack from members of his own party. Alexander Grant MacKay criticized his failure to take advantage of the recent conference of premiers to press for the transfer of rights over Alberta's natural resources from the federal to the provincial government (Sifton had made this a priority during the pre-war years, but had largely ceased his advocacy on the breakout of hostilities), and James Gray Turgeon attacked the government's policy of levying taxes for the support of soldiers' dependants on the grounds that he considered it a federal responsibility.[17]

 
Stewart (behind the plow) at a sod-turning event in St. Albert, soon after becoming premier

Divisions within the provincial Liberals came to a head in August 1918, when Stewart dismissed Cross as Attorney-General.[17] It later emerged that Cross had refused to fire two detectives in his department after Stewart had concluded that their work would be better done by the provincial police, and that Stewart had found Cross's work to be generally poor. He had asked for Cross's resignation, received no response, and rescinded the Order in Council appointing him. In an effort to secure Cross's departure from politics, Stewart offered him the position of Alberta's provincial agent in London, England; Cross refused it, and Stewart was criticized for using appointments for political advantage.[18]

Prohibition and democratic reform edit

Alberta had implemented prohibition in 1916 as the result of a referendum supported by the powerful United Farmers of Alberta (UFA) lobby group.[19] By the time Stewart took office, it was becoming apparent that the policy was not being universally complied with: Conservative MLA George Douglas Stanley alleged that judges were often hungover when they sat in judgment of those accused of violating liquor laws, and Cross's replacement as Attorney-General, John Boyle, admitted that in his estimation 65% of the province's male population broke the Prohibition Act.[20] In 1921 the government realized profits of $800,000 on alcohol legally sold for "medicinal" purposes, and Boyle estimated bootleggers' profits at nine times that figure.[21] Stewart blamed the problems on insufficient public support for the law,[20] but even as he did so it was clear that there was not enough support to repeal it.[21]

 
Charles Stewart as Premier

Prohibition was not the only UFA-endorsed policy to have been passed by Sifton's government: indeed, the legislation that allowed for citizen-initiated referendums of the sort that had led to prohibition was itself the result of UFA advocacy.[22] Once Stewart became Premier, he committed to the introduction of another UFA-favoured democratic reform—proportional representation.[23] However, a committee formed to examine the possibility disintegrated over what historian Carrol Jaques calls "battles within the group and a general dislike of the concept".[24]

Public works edit

Railway development had dominated the premierships of Stewart's predecessors and, while losing political potency as an issue, it was still a matter that demanded his attention.[25] Though Sifton had established a railway policy in 1913 that was satisfactory to all wings of the Liberal Party, the outbreak of the First World War the following year had all but put an end to railway construction across Canada. Once peace came, Albertans living near promised but as yet unbuilt lines began to clamour for their completion.[26] The private companies with whom the government had partnered, however, were in no position to undertake the construction. The Edmonton, Dunvegan and British Columbia Railway was taken over by the Canadian Pacific Railway, with a clause in the agreement requiring the provincial government to spend $1 million to improve the route, and the Alberta and Great Waterways was taken over by Stewart's government directly (J. D. McArthur, the line's previous owner, retained an option to repurchase it, but it was never exercised).[27]

Irrigation projects also occupied much of Stewart's attention as Premier. As with railways, the First World War had disrupted planned irrigation projects, and Albertan farmers, especially those from the arid south, were eager to see them resumed. Specifically popular was a project to irrigate 500,000 acres (200,000 ha) in Lethbridge County, but when bonds were issued to finance the project, they did not sell. Stewart sought federal backing of the bonds, but Prime Minister Arthur Meighen declined. Stewart reluctantly agreed to offer a provincial guarantee, but to avoid negative reaction from northern Alberta he linked the enabling legislation to one allowing for drainage in northern areas.[28]

Stewart and the United Farmers of Alberta edit

The United Farmers of Alberta had its beginnings as a farmers' advocacy organization; Stewart, a farmer, had joined it.[29] The UFA had achieved several successes in dealing with the Sifton government, and Stewart also endeavoured to cooperate with it. The irrigation project was strongly supported by the UFA, as was Stewart's action on proportional representation.[24] When Peace River MLA William Archibald Rae introduced legislation to allow Imperial Oil to build a pipeline in the province, UFA President Henry Wise Wood sent Stewart a telegram of protest, as he believed that pipelines should be common carriers;[30] Stewart read it in the legislature, and Rae's bill was withdrawn.[24] Even given the victories, the UFA was not satisfied with the government's record: in 1918, the government took action on only three of the many resolutions the UFA had sent to it.[31]

 
Stewart's official portrait by V. A. Long.

Some in the UFA had long favoured contesting elections directly as a political party instead of remaining on the sidelines as a pressure group, but Wood and other UFA leaders were implacably opposed to the idea.[32] During the war, however, the political wing began to gain momentum, and at the 1919 UFA convention, it was decided that UFA candidates would contest the next provincial election.[33] In fact, it ended up doing so somewhat sooner: in 1919, Charles W. Fisher, Liberal MLA for Cochrane, died as a result of that year's influenza epidemic, and a by-election was necessitated to replace him.[23] The UFA's Alex Moore defeated his only opponent, Liberal Edward V. Thomson, by 835 votes to 708.[34]

Stewart felt betrayed: "It has been my fight ever since I became a minister to see that the farmers of the province were having a square deal," he remarked, "and I think I have done this with some success."[24] Despite his general sympathy with the aims of the UFA, he could not support their transition into a political party. For one, he disagreed with the UFA's belief that politics should be conducted along class, rather than ideological, lines. Stewart believed that "the more strongly armed the classes become the harder will it be to get the things we really need in our government" and asserted that "I never did and never will have any desire to form a coalition with anybody except with men who think the same as I do."[35]

Given the UFA's formal adoption of the goal of replacing Stewart's Liberal government with a Farmer government, it remained surprisingly friendly towards the Premier. While campaigning for Moore during the Cochrane by-election, Wood called Stewart "an honourable, upright citizen, doing the best he could under difficult circumstances" and boasted that "if I have got to tear down the character of an honourable man to build up something that I want, I am not going to build it up."[36] When at last the general election came, in 1921, the UFA declined to run a candidate in Stewart's Sedgewick riding as a sign of respect to the Premier.[37] After the UFA swept to victory, there was even speculation that Stewart, still a UFA member, would stay on as Premier of a new Farmer's government (as part of its opposition to "old style politics," the UFA had contested the election without designating a leader),[38] but he announced otherwise.[37]

 
Following his exit from premiership, Stewart resided at Tyrone Manor in downtown Edmonton in the 1920s.[39]

Defeat and legacy edit

The last provincial election had been held in June 1917, and four years was the normal life of a legislature in Canada. Stewart called an election for July 19.[40] Though the Liberals' fortunes had been sagging in the post-war years, there remained no doubt that they could again defeat the Conservatives; their real challenge was evidently from the newly politicized UFA.[41] Bolstering this challenge by increasing farmers' discontent was a collapse of agricultural prices.[42] The UFA had no leader, no fixed platform, and no inclination to attack Stewart or his government.[38] What it did have was superior organization,[38] and on election day this organization made itself felt in the form of thirty-nine UFA members elected to fourteen Liberals.[42] Stewart, who has been acclaimed in his own riding of Sedgewick, announced that he would resign as Premier as soon as the UFA had selected somebody to replace him.[38] Once it selected Herbert Greenfield, Stewart made good on his pledge, and Greenfield replaced him August 13.[37]

 
Stewart with his family, c. 1930

In Jaques' view, Stewart was defined by what he was not:

he was not involved in any of the railway scandals, current or past; he was not conspicuously involved in any of the personal battles that had consumed Alexander Rutherford, Frank Oliver, the brothers Arthur and Clifford Sifton, Charles Cross, or any of their followers; he was not a high-powered flamboyant Liberal partisan; he did not let himself get involved in federal Liberal Party machinations over issues such as the conscription crisis; nor did he seem to be high-handed or dictatorial—a criticism levelled at his predecessor, Arthur Sifton.[43]

She argues that he was a "decent family man" whose career was a product of the circumstances in which he found himself.[37]

Historian L. G. Thomas recognized Stewart's admirable qualities,[17] but criticized him for lacking Sifton's "ruthless and forceful leadership"[44] and claimed that "few provincial premiers have been more universally praised by their opponents and more unanimously deplored by their supporters."[17] Even so, he acknowledged that the decisive factor in Stewart's downfall was not anything that he did, but the decision by the UFA to run candidates in 1921; in Thomas's view, Sifton would have been defeated in 1917 if he had had to contend with a politicized UFA.[44]

Mount Charles Stewart is located in the Bow Valley just north of Canmore.[45] The peak was named for him in 1928.

Federal politics edit

Following the 1921 federal election, William Lyon Mackenzie King's Liberals came to power in Ottawa. They had not won any seats in Alberta, and Stewart was invited to join King's cabinet as Minister of the Interior and Mines (which included responsibility as Superintendent-General of Indian Affairs).[37] He won a 1922 by-election in the Quebec seat of Argenteuil, before shifting to the more familiar territory of Edmonton West in the 1925 election; he was re-elected there in 1926 and 1930. In the 1935 election, he ran in the new riding of Jasper—Edson, where he was defeated by Social Crediter Walter Frederick Kuhl.[46]

 
The signing ceremony for the resource transfer agreement; Stewart is seated second from left.

As a cabinet minister, Stewart aggressively marketed Canada's coal both domestically and internationally, for which he was honoured by Alberta's coal producers at a banquet and later awarded the Randolph Bruce Gold Medal in Science by the Canadian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy. He took a great interest in water power, and advised the government on jurisdictional issues surrounding the Niagara, St. Mary, and Milk Rivers.[46] In 1927, he served as Canada's representative at the League of Nations.[2] As Minister of the Interior, he oversaw the 1927 creation of Prince Albert National Park.[47] Ironically, given the attacks he had sustained as Premier from Alexander Grant MacKay, he was part of the federal delegation that finally negotiated the transfer of resource control from the federal to the Alberta provincial government in December 1929.[48] The same agreement transferred resource rights to Saskatchewan and Manitoba. After it was signed but before it took effect, Manitoba Premier John Bracken concluded an agreement with the Winnipeg Electric Company, a private concern, to develop a hydroelectric dam at Seven Sisters' Reach. Because resource rights were still controlled by the federal government, the deal required federal approval. Stewart advocated withholding this approval in deference to Manitoba public opinion, which favoured public ownership of such projects, but King honoured a provision of the resource transfer agreement that required the wishes of provincial governments to be respected until the transfer was complete and granted approval.[49] Stewart's preference for public over private ownership extended to King's planned creation of the Bank of Canada; Stewart wanted the new institution entirely under the control of the government, but King preferred an arrangement whereby half of its directors would be appointed by the government and half by private shareholders and suggested that advocates of public ownership might find themselves more at home in the socialist Cooperative Commonwealth Federation than in his Liberal caucus.[50]

 
Charles Stewart as a federal cabinet minister

Despite Stewart's involvement in transferring resource rights to Alberta, his relationship with the UFA government that had defeated him in 1921 was frosty: Lakeland College historian Franklin Foster, in his biography of UFA Premier John Edward Brownlee, alleges that this antipathy influenced Stewart's preference for private corporations over the Alberta government in granting hydroelectric power permits.[51] He also feuded with then-Premier Brownlee over development in Alberta's national parks (Stewart favouring large-scale private development and Brownlee opposing it), causing King to record in his diary "Brownlee strikes me as...being superior to Mr. Stewart, who is handicapped in his dislike of [Brownlee]."[52] When King sought to absorb Progressives into his Liberal Party to form a stronger coalition against the Conservatives, Stewart opposed cooperation with the UFA leaders who made up a large part of the Progressives' Albertan base.[53][54] While King was inclined to view UFA politicians, like Progressives elsewhere, as "Liberals in a hurry" who were fundamentally comfortable with his government and preferred it to the Conservatives,[55] Stewart understood that the UFA was a distinct group whose members were in many respect more conservative than liberal.[56] King dismissed his minister's views as being the result of Stewart's acrimonious history with the UFA.[57]

In fact, Stewart did not enjoy King's confidence.[58] Though he brought him into his cabinet in 1921 in part at the urging of Progressive leader Thomas Crerar, King found Stewart to be an inadequate protector of western interests—especially in his advocacy of tariff reduction, which King found lacklustre—and did not trust his political advice on the west.[59] By 1925 he was considering appointing Stewart to the Senate, to remove him from active political involvement, but was handicapped by the absence of any other Alberta representation in his cabinet.[60] In 1926 Stewart served as an emissary from King to recruit Saskatchewan Premier Charles Avery Dunning to the federal cabinet;[61] the mission fulfilled, King kept Stewart in cabinet but wrote in his diary that all matters pertaining to Alberta were to be "left to Dunning to do as he thinks best".[56] By 1927, King complained that Stewart had "no grip" on the province of which he had once been Premier,[62] and in 1930 he wrote "Organization in Alberta is terrible. Stewart is worse than useless, is like an old woman, with no real control of situation."[63] In the 1930 federal election Dunning and Crerar were both defeated; King complained that it was "perfectly terrible to have Stewart alone representing the West."[64] When Stewart too went down to defeat in 1935, King was pleased "not to have to consider him" in assembling his new cabinet, and opted instead to leave Alberta unrepresented to punish it for failing to elect any Liberals.[65]

Post-political life edit

After Stewart's defeat in 1935, he was appointed by George V to chair the Canadian section of the International Joint Commission, in recognition of his expertise on international water boundary issues. In 1938, he was appointed chair of the Canadian section of the British Columbia – Yukon – Alaska Highway Commission.[46] In these capacities, he travelled across Canada, visiting his son George at the family homestead near Killam at every opportunity.[66] He died December 6, 1946, leaving an estate of $21,961.[67]

Born in one of Canada's original provinces, Stewart moved west as part of a vast migration to the prairies, and settled in Alberta the year it became a province. As Alberta grew, Stewart played an increasingly important political role in it, until he joined the federal government to become Alberta's voice there, ultimately helping it achieve constitutional equality with the older provinces by transferring to its government control of its resources. As Mackenzie King eulogized him, "in more respects than one, Mr. Stewart's career mirrored the development of Canada itself."[67]

Electoral record edit

As party leader edit

Party Party Leader # of
candidates
Seats Popular Vote
1917 Elected % Change # % % Change
United Farmers Henry Wise Wood 45 * 38 * 86,250 28.92% *
Liberal Charles Stewart 61 34 15 -55.9% 101,584 34.07% -8.99%
Dominion Labor Holmes Jowett 10 1 4 +300% 33,987 11.40% +8.56%
Independent 18 2 3 +50.0% 28,794 9.66% +4.44%
Conservative Albert Ewing 13 19 1[68] -94.7% 32,734 10.98% -26.4%
Independent Labour 7 * - * 10,733 3.60% *
Socialist 2 - - 0.0% 2,628 0.88% +0.26%
  Independent Liberal 1 * - * 1,467 0.49% *
Sub-total 157 56 61 +8.9% 298,177 100%  
  Soldiers' vote (Province at large) 0 2 - - - - -20.33%
Total 157 58 61 +5.2% 298,177 100%  
Sources: Elections Alberta; . Elections Alberta. Archived from the original on 2008-02-11. Retrieved 2008-01-13.


As MLA edit

1921 Alberta general election: Sedgewick
Party Candidate Votes
Liberal Charles Stewart Acclaimed
[69]
1917 Alberta general election: Sedgewick
Party Candidate Votes %
Liberal Charles Stewart 1,657 63.1%
Progressive Conservative John R. Lavell 971 36.9%
[69]
1913 Alberta general election: Sedgewick
Party Candidate Votes %
Liberal Charles Stewart 889 70.1%
Progressive Conservative W. Watson 371 29.9%
[69]
Alberta provincial by-election, 1912: Sedgewick
Party Candidate Votes %
Liberal Charles Stewart 2,022 67.7%
Progressive Conservative William John Blair 963 32.3%
[69]
1909 Alberta general election: Sedgewick
Party Candidate Votes
Liberal Charles Stewart Acclaimed
[69]

As MP edit

1935 Canadian federal election: Jasper—Edson
Party Candidate Votes %
Social Credit Walter Frederick Kuhl 7,208 49.1%
Liberal Charles Stewart 5,405 36.8%
Co-operative Commonwealth George Elzy Bevington 2,067 14.1%
. Elections Canada. Archived from the original on 2009-06-09. Retrieved 2008-01-13.
1930 Canadian federal election: Edmonton West
Party Candidate Votes %
Liberal Charles Stewart 9,223 50.7%
Conservative Frederick C. Jamieson 8,960 49.3%
[70]
Canadian federal by-election, October 5, 1926: Edmonton West
Party Candidate Votes
Liberal Charles Stewart Acclaimed
[70]
1926 Canadian federal election: Edmonton West
Party Candidate Votes %
Liberal Charles Stewart 7,223 55.6%
Conservative Frederick C. Jamieson 5,772 44.4%
[70]
1925 Canadian federal election: Edmonton West
Party Candidate Votes %
Liberal Charles Stewart 6,394 48.8%
Conservative James McCrie Douglas 4,706 35.9%
Labour James East 2,007 15.3%
[70]
Canadian federal by-election, 1922: Argenteuil
Party Candidate Votes
Liberal Charles Stewart Acclaimed
[71]

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ a b c Jaques 2004, p. 44.
  2. ^ a b c . Legislative Assembly of Alberta. Archived from the original on 2008-01-13. Retrieved 2008-01-17.
  3. ^ "8 Jul 1905, 1 - The Province at Newspapers.com". Newspapers.com. Retrieved 2021-10-17.
  4. ^ a b c d Jaques 2004, p. 45.
  5. ^ . Elections Alberta. Archived from the original on 2008-02-11. Retrieved 2008-01-13.
  6. ^ Thomas 1959, p. 84.
  7. ^ Thomas 1959, p. 125.
  8. ^ Thomas 1959, p. 127.
  9. ^ a b c Jaques 2004, p. 46.
  10. ^ Thomas 1959, p. 150.
  11. ^ Thomas 1959, p. 135.
  12. ^ a b Thomas 1959, p. 179.
  13. ^ a b c Thomas 1959, p. 182.
  14. ^ a b Thomas 1959, p. 180.
  15. ^ Thomas 1959, p. 88.
  16. ^ Jaques 2004, p. 47.
  17. ^ a b c d Thomas 1959, p. 183.
  18. ^ Thomas 1959, p. 194.
  19. ^ Thomas 1959, pp. 159–160.
  20. ^ a b Thomas 1959, p. 192.
  21. ^ a b Thomas 1959, p. 193.
  22. ^ Thomas 1959, p. 136.
  23. ^ a b Thomas 1959, p. 195.
  24. ^ a b c d Jaques 2004, p. 50.
  25. ^ Jaques 2004, p. 51.
  26. ^ Thomas 1959, p. 190.
  27. ^ Thomas 1959, p. 191.
  28. ^ Thomas 1959, p. 189.
  29. ^ Jaques 2004, pp. 49–50.
  30. ^ Thomas 1959, p. 200.
  31. ^ Rennie 2000, p. 128.
  32. ^ Rennie 2000, p. 132.
  33. ^ Rennie 2000, p. 180.
  34. ^ Mardon & Mardon 1993, p. 53.
  35. ^ Thomas 1959, p. 196.
  36. ^ Rennie 2000, p. 184.
  37. ^ a b c d e Jaques 2004, p. 52.
  38. ^ a b c d Thomas 1959, p. 205.
  39. ^ Henderson's Edmonton and Strathcona City Directory. Henderson Directories Limited. 1921. p. 546. OCLC 1296904192.
  40. ^ Thomas 1959, p. 202.
  41. ^ Thomas 1959, pp. 204–205.
  42. ^ a b Thomas 1959, p. 204.
  43. ^ Jaques 2004, pp. 51–52.
  44. ^ a b Thomas 1959, p. 207.
  45. ^ Lakusta, Ernie (2004). Banff & Lake Louise History Explorer. Canmore, AB: Altitude Publishing Canada Ltd. p. 29. ISBN 1-55153-636-6.
  46. ^ a b c Jaques 2004, p. 53.
  47. ^ Wardhaugh 2000, p. 130.
  48. ^ Jaques 2004, pp. 54–55.
  49. ^ Wardhaugh 2000, p. 144.
  50. ^ Wardhaugh 2000, p. 179.
  51. ^ Foster 1981, p. 102&147.
  52. ^ Foster 1981, p. 167.
  53. ^ Foster 1981, p. 129.
  54. ^ Wardhaugh 2000, pp. 66&114.
  55. ^ Wardhaugh 2000, pp. 124& 149.
  56. ^ a b Wardhaugh 2000, p. 114.
  57. ^ Wardhaugh 2000, p. 149.
  58. ^ Wardhaugh 2000, p. 152.
  59. ^ Wardhaugh 2000, pp. 84&87.
  60. ^ Wardhaugh 2000, pp. 106&114&125.
  61. ^ Wardhaugh 2000, p. 111.
  62. ^ Wardhaugh 2000, p. 134.
  63. ^ Wardhaugh 2000, p. 159.
  64. ^ Wardhaugh 2000, p. 160.
  65. ^ Wardhaugh 2000, p. 190.
  66. ^ Jaques 2004, pp. 53–54.
  67. ^ a b Jaques 2004, p. 55.
  68. ^ "U.F.A. Now Has 39 Members In Legislature So Recount Shows". Edmonton Journal. July 19, 1921. p. 1.
  69. ^ a b c d e Mardon & Mardon 1993, p. 117.
  70. ^ a b c d . Elections Canada. Archived from the original on 2009-06-09. Retrieved 2008-01-13.
  71. ^ . Elections Canada. Archived from the original on 2009-06-09. Retrieved 2008-01-13.

Works cited edit

  • Foster, Franklin L. (1981). John E. Brownlee: A Biography. Lloydminster, Alberta: Foster Learning Inc. ISBN 978-1-55220-004-9.
  • Jaques, Carrol (2004). "Charles Stewart". In Bradford J. Rennie (ed.). Alberta Premiers of the Twentieth Century. Regina, Saskatchewan: Canadian Plains Research Center, University of Regina. ISBN 0-88977-151-0.
  • Mardon, Ernest; Mardon, Austin (1993). Alberta Election Results 1882–1992. Edmonton: Documentary Heritage Society of Alberta.
  • Rennie, Bradford (2000). The Rise of Agrarian Democracy: The United Farmers and Farm Women of Alberta, 1909–1921. Toronto, Ontario: University of Toronto Press, Incorporated. ISBN 0-8020-8374-9.
  • Thomas, Lewis Gwynne (1959). The Liberal Party in Alberta. Toronto, Ontario: University of Toronto Press. ISBN 9780802050830.
  • Wardhaugh, Robert Alexander (2000). MacKenzie King and the Prairie West. Toronto, Ontario: University of Toronto Press, Incorporated. ISBN 0-8020-4733-5.

charles, stewart, premier, charles, stewart, august, 1868, december, 1946, canadian, politician, served, third, premier, alberta, from, 1917, until, 1921, born, strabane, ontario, then, wentworth, county, part, hamilton, stewart, farmer, moved, west, alberta, . Charles Stewart PC August 26 1868 December 6 1946 was a Canadian politician who served as the third premier of Alberta from 1917 until 1921 Born in Strabane Ontario in then Wentworth County now part of Hamilton Stewart was a farmer who moved west to Alberta after his farm was destroyed by a storm There he became active in politics and was elected to the Legislative Assembly of Alberta in the 1909 election He served as Minister of Public Works and Minister of Municipal Affairs the first person to hold the latter position in Alberta in the government of Arthur Sifton When Sifton left provincial politics in 1917 to join the federal cabinet Stewart was named his replacement The HonourableCharles StewartPC3rd Premier of AlbertaIn office October 30 1917 August 13 1921MonarchGeorge VLieutenant GovernorRobert BrettPreceded byArthur SiftonSucceeded byHerbert GreenfieldMember of the Legislative Assembly of Alberta for SedgewickIn office March 22 1909 February 28 1922Preceded byNew districtSucceeded byAlbert AndrewsAlberta Minister of Railways and TelephonesIn office October 16 1917 August 31 1921Preceded byArthur SiftonSucceeded byVernor SmithAlberta Provincial SecretaryIn office October 16 1917 August 28 1918Preceded byArchibald J McLeanSucceeded byWilfrid GariepyAlberta Minister of Public WorksIn office November 28 1913 October 16 1917Preceded byCharles R MitchellSucceeded byArchibald J McLeanAlberta Minister of Municipal AffairsIn office May 4 1912 November 29 1913Preceded byNew positionSucceeded byWilfrid GariepyMember of the House of Commons of Canada for Edmonton WestIn office October 29 1925 October 14 1935Preceded byDonald MacBeth KennedySucceeded byJames Angus MacKinnonMember of the House of Commons of Canada for ArgenteuilIn office February 28 1922 October 29 1925Preceded byPeter Robert McGibbonSucceeded byGeorge PerleyCanadian Minister of the Interior and MinesIn office December 29 1921 June 29 1926Preceded byJames Alexander LougheedSucceeded byHenry Herbert StevensIn office September 25 1926 August 6 1930Preceded byR B BennettSucceeded byWesley Ashton GordonPersonal detailsBornAugust 26 1868Strabane Wentworth County Ontario CanadaDiedDecember 6 1946 1946 12 06 aged 78 Ottawa Ontario CanadaPolitical partyAlberta Liberal PartyLiberal Party of CanadaSpouseJane Russell SneathChildren8ProfessionFarmerSignature As premier Stewart tried to hold together his Liberal Party which was divided by the Conscription Crisis of 1917 He endeavoured to enforce prohibition of alcoholic beverages which had been enshrined in law by a referendum during Sifton s premiership but found that the law was not widely enough supported to be effectively policed His government took over several of the province s financially troubled railroads and guaranteed bonds sold to fund irrigation projects Several of these policies were the result of lobbying by the United Farmers of Alberta UFA with which Stewart enjoyed good relations even so the UFA was politicized during Stewart s premiership and ran candidates in the 1921 election Unable to match the UFA s appeal to rural voters Stewart s government was defeated at the polls and he was succeeded as premier by Herbert Greenfield After leaving provincial politics Stewart was invited to join the federal cabinet of William Lyon Mackenzie King in which he served as Minister of the Interior and Mines In this capacity he signed on behalf of the federal government an agreement that transferred control of Alberta s natural resources from Ottawa to the provincial government a concession he had been criticized for being unable to negotiate as Premier He served in King s cabinet until 1930 when the King government was defeated but remained a member of Parliament until he lost his seat in 1935 He died in December 1946 in Ottawa Contents 1 Early life 1 1 Early political career 2 Premier 2 1 Party division 2 2 Prohibition and democratic reform 2 3 Public works 2 4 Stewart and the United Farmers of Alberta 2 5 Defeat and legacy 3 Federal politics 4 Post political life 5 Electoral record 5 1 As party leader 5 2 As MLA 5 3 As MP 6 References 6 1 Citations 6 2 Works citedEarly life editCharles Stewart was born on August 26 1868 in Strabane Ontario on Wentworth County to Charles and Catherine Stewart Charles Sr was a stonemason and farmer 1 As a child Charles Jr accompanied his father to Carlisle to hear Canadian Prime Minister Sir John A Macdonald According to family lore Macdonald noticed the young future Premier and told him that he was a fine boy who would make a good politician someday When Charles Jr was 16 he moved with his family to a farm near Barrie Seven years later on December 17 1891 he married Jane Russell Sneath 1 the pair had eight children 2 After marrying Sneath he converted to her Church of England faith 2 nbsp Stewart s farmhouse in Killam Stewart himself is standing at lower left In 1892 Charles Sr died leaving his son in charge of the family farm In 1905 on July 8 this farm was destroyed by a tornado 3 and Stewart decided to move west settling near Killam Alberta in 1906 His family endured a cold winter the warmest place in their shack was on the kitchen table so they kept the baby there and in the spring their crops were destroyed by hail As he was unsuccessful at farming he supplemented his income using the stonemason s skills he had learned from his father he laid foundations for the Canadian Pacific Railway worked on the High Level Bridge in Edmonton and dug Killam s town well He later worked in real estate and as a farm implement dealer earning enough to buy a new and larger homestead in 1912 1 Stewart was active in his local community he was the first chair of the Killam School District attended the first meeting of Killam ratepayers on January 19 1907 and was involved in the incorporation of Killam in January 1908 In 1909 the Alberta Liberal Party which had dominated provincial politics throughout Alberta s short history came seeking a candidate to run in the new riding of Sedgewick Stewart agreed to run and was elected by acclamation in the 1909 election 4 Early political career edit At the time of Stewart s acclamation Premier Alexander Cameron Rutherford seemed unassailable he controlled 36 of the Legislative Assembly of Alberta s 41 seats Stewart s being one 4 and his Liberals had just won nearly sixty percent of the vote in their re election bid 5 Months later however Rutherford and his government were embroiled in the Alberta and Great Waterways Railway scandal and the Liberal Party was split 4 Initially Stewart remained loyal to Rutherford and went so far as to allege in the legislature that insurgent Liberal John R Boyle had offered two members of the legislative assembly MLAs who were also hotel keepers immunity from prosecution for liquor violations if they would support a new government in which Boyle was Attorney General 6 As additional details of the scandal emerged however Stewart himself became an insurgent and was pleased when Arthur Sifton replaced Rutherford as Premier 4 In May 1912 Sifton expanded his cabinet and Stewart was made the province s first Minister of Municipal Affairs 7 As was required by the custom of the day when an MLA was appointed to cabinet he resigned his seat to run in a by election in which he easily defeated Conservative William John Blair 8 In cabinet he became known as an advocate of public ownership of utilities which placed him more in sympathy with the Conservative opposition than with Sifton 9 Despite this position he backed Sifton s 1913 resolution to the Alberta and Great Waterways problem which involved partnering with the private sector this vote marked the first time that the Liberal caucus was united on the railways question since before the scandal broke in 1910 10 In December 1913 Sifton moved Stewart from Municipal Affairs into the Public Works portfolio in this capacity Stewart played a major role in the incorporation of the Alberta Farmers Co operative Elevator Company 9 which was a farmer run co operative with a charter to own and operate grain elevators 11 Premier editShortly after the 1917 provincial election in which Stewart and the Liberals were both soundly re elected Canada found itself embroiled in a conscription crisis The federal Conservative government led by Robert Borden supported implementing conscription 12 The opposition Liberals led by Wilfrid Laurier nominally opposed conscription but many English speaking Liberals in fact supported it 13 The crisis was resolved when Borden formed a Union government composed of Conservatives and pro conscription Liberals 14 Sifton falling into the latter group was chosen as Alberta s representative in that government and resigned as Premier in October 1917 Lieutenant Governor Robert Brett accepting Sifton s choice of successor asked Stewart to form a government 12 His only serious rival for the position of premier was Charles Wilson Cross who opposed conscription and was therefore not a palatable choice for much of the Liberal establishment 9 Party division edit The Alberta and Great Waterways scandal had opened up a rift in the provincial Liberal Party between those who remained loyal to Cross and Rutherford and those who did not with the latter group being led by William Henry Cushing and Frank Oliver 15 Sifton had papered over if not in fact healed this rift and it did not burst open again until the conscription crisis 14 This time however the fault lines were different Cross and Oliver had put aside their longtime enmity to join in opposing conscription and Sifton who had been selected Premier in part because he was not identified with either faction in the old feud was Alberta s most prominent pro conscription Liberal 13 Stewart was a supporter of conscription and of the Union government 16 but did not take any active part in the acrimonious 1917 federal election which was fought on the issue Several of his ministers were not so circumspect Attorney General Cross Education Minister Boyle and Municipal Affairs Minister Wilfrid Gariepy campaigned for the Laurier Liberals Public Works Minister Archibald J McLean and Treasurer Charles R Mitchell stayed out of the fray while leaving no doubt of their support for Union 13 During the first legislative session after this election Stewart came under attack from members of his own party Alexander Grant MacKay criticized his failure to take advantage of the recent conference of premiers to press for the transfer of rights over Alberta s natural resources from the federal to the provincial government Sifton had made this a priority during the pre war years but had largely ceased his advocacy on the breakout of hostilities and James Gray Turgeon attacked the government s policy of levying taxes for the support of soldiers dependants on the grounds that he considered it a federal responsibility 17 nbsp Stewart behind the plow at a sod turning event in St Albert soon after becoming premier Divisions within the provincial Liberals came to a head in August 1918 when Stewart dismissed Cross as Attorney General 17 It later emerged that Cross had refused to fire two detectives in his department after Stewart had concluded that their work would be better done by the provincial police and that Stewart had found Cross s work to be generally poor He had asked for Cross s resignation received no response and rescinded the Order in Council appointing him In an effort to secure Cross s departure from politics Stewart offered him the position of Alberta s provincial agent in London England Cross refused it and Stewart was criticized for using appointments for political advantage 18 Prohibition and democratic reform edit Alberta had implemented prohibition in 1916 as the result of a referendum supported by the powerful United Farmers of Alberta UFA lobby group 19 By the time Stewart took office it was becoming apparent that the policy was not being universally complied with Conservative MLA George Douglas Stanley alleged that judges were often hungover when they sat in judgment of those accused of violating liquor laws and Cross s replacement as Attorney General John Boyle admitted that in his estimation 65 of the province s male population broke the Prohibition Act 20 In 1921 the government realized profits of 800 000 on alcohol legally sold for medicinal purposes and Boyle estimated bootleggers profits at nine times that figure 21 Stewart blamed the problems on insufficient public support for the law 20 but even as he did so it was clear that there was not enough support to repeal it 21 nbsp Charles Stewart as PremierProhibition was not the only UFA endorsed policy to have been passed by Sifton s government indeed the legislation that allowed for citizen initiated referendums of the sort that had led to prohibition was itself the result of UFA advocacy 22 Once Stewart became Premier he committed to the introduction of another UFA favoured democratic reform proportional representation 23 However a committee formed to examine the possibility disintegrated over what historian Carrol Jaques calls battles within the group and a general dislike of the concept 24 Public works edit Railway development had dominated the premierships of Stewart s predecessors and while losing political potency as an issue it was still a matter that demanded his attention 25 Though Sifton had established a railway policy in 1913 that was satisfactory to all wings of the Liberal Party the outbreak of the First World War the following year had all but put an end to railway construction across Canada Once peace came Albertans living near promised but as yet unbuilt lines began to clamour for their completion 26 The private companies with whom the government had partnered however were in no position to undertake the construction The Edmonton Dunvegan and British Columbia Railway was taken over by the Canadian Pacific Railway with a clause in the agreement requiring the provincial government to spend 1 million to improve the route and the Alberta and Great Waterways was taken over by Stewart s government directly J D McArthur the line s previous owner retained an option to repurchase it but it was never exercised 27 Irrigation projects also occupied much of Stewart s attention as Premier As with railways the First World War had disrupted planned irrigation projects and Albertan farmers especially those from the arid south were eager to see them resumed Specifically popular was a project to irrigate 500 000 acres 200 000 ha in Lethbridge County but when bonds were issued to finance the project they did not sell Stewart sought federal backing of the bonds but Prime Minister Arthur Meighen declined Stewart reluctantly agreed to offer a provincial guarantee but to avoid negative reaction from northern Alberta he linked the enabling legislation to one allowing for drainage in northern areas 28 Stewart and the United Farmers of Alberta edit The United Farmers of Alberta had its beginnings as a farmers advocacy organization Stewart a farmer had joined it 29 The UFA had achieved several successes in dealing with the Sifton government and Stewart also endeavoured to cooperate with it The irrigation project was strongly supported by the UFA as was Stewart s action on proportional representation 24 When Peace River MLA William Archibald Rae introduced legislation to allow Imperial Oil to build a pipeline in the province UFA President Henry Wise Wood sent Stewart a telegram of protest as he believed that pipelines should be common carriers 30 Stewart read it in the legislature and Rae s bill was withdrawn 24 Even given the victories the UFA was not satisfied with the government s record in 1918 the government took action on only three of the many resolutions the UFA had sent to it 31 nbsp Stewart s official portrait by V A Long Some in the UFA had long favoured contesting elections directly as a political party instead of remaining on the sidelines as a pressure group but Wood and other UFA leaders were implacably opposed to the idea 32 During the war however the political wing began to gain momentum and at the 1919 UFA convention it was decided that UFA candidates would contest the next provincial election 33 In fact it ended up doing so somewhat sooner in 1919 Charles W Fisher Liberal MLA for Cochrane died as a result of that year s influenza epidemic and a by election was necessitated to replace him 23 The UFA s Alex Moore defeated his only opponent Liberal Edward V Thomson by 835 votes to 708 34 Stewart felt betrayed It has been my fight ever since I became a minister to see that the farmers of the province were having a square deal he remarked and I think I have done this with some success 24 Despite his general sympathy with the aims of the UFA he could not support their transition into a political party For one he disagreed with the UFA s belief that politics should be conducted along class rather than ideological lines Stewart believed that the more strongly armed the classes become the harder will it be to get the things we really need in our government and asserted that I never did and never will have any desire to form a coalition with anybody except with men who think the same as I do 35 Given the UFA s formal adoption of the goal of replacing Stewart s Liberal government with a Farmer government it remained surprisingly friendly towards the Premier While campaigning for Moore during the Cochrane by election Wood called Stewart an honourable upright citizen doing the best he could under difficult circumstances and boasted that if I have got to tear down the character of an honourable man to build up something that I want I am not going to build it up 36 When at last the general election came in 1921 the UFA declined to run a candidate in Stewart s Sedgewick riding as a sign of respect to the Premier 37 After the UFA swept to victory there was even speculation that Stewart still a UFA member would stay on as Premier of a new Farmer s government as part of its opposition to old style politics the UFA had contested the election without designating a leader 38 but he announced otherwise 37 nbsp Following his exit from premiership Stewart resided at Tyrone Manor in downtown Edmonton in the 1920s 39 Defeat and legacy edit Main article 1921 Alberta general election The last provincial election had been held in June 1917 and four years was the normal life of a legislature in Canada Stewart called an election for July 19 40 Though the Liberals fortunes had been sagging in the post war years there remained no doubt that they could again defeat the Conservatives their real challenge was evidently from the newly politicized UFA 41 Bolstering this challenge by increasing farmers discontent was a collapse of agricultural prices 42 The UFA had no leader no fixed platform and no inclination to attack Stewart or his government 38 What it did have was superior organization 38 and on election day this organization made itself felt in the form of thirty nine UFA members elected to fourteen Liberals 42 Stewart who has been acclaimed in his own riding of Sedgewick announced that he would resign as Premier as soon as the UFA had selected somebody to replace him 38 Once it selected Herbert Greenfield Stewart made good on his pledge and Greenfield replaced him August 13 37 nbsp Stewart with his family c 1930In Jaques view Stewart was defined by what he was not he was not involved in any of the railway scandals current or past he was not conspicuously involved in any of the personal battles that had consumed Alexander Rutherford Frank Oliver the brothers Arthur and Clifford Sifton Charles Cross or any of their followers he was not a high powered flamboyant Liberal partisan he did not let himself get involved in federal Liberal Party machinations over issues such as the conscription crisis nor did he seem to be high handed or dictatorial a criticism levelled at his predecessor Arthur Sifton 43 She argues that he was a decent family man whose career was a product of the circumstances in which he found himself 37 Historian L G Thomas recognized Stewart s admirable qualities 17 but criticized him for lacking Sifton s ruthless and forceful leadership 44 and claimed that few provincial premiers have been more universally praised by their opponents and more unanimously deplored by their supporters 17 Even so he acknowledged that the decisive factor in Stewart s downfall was not anything that he did but the decision by the UFA to run candidates in 1921 in Thomas s view Sifton would have been defeated in 1917 if he had had to contend with a politicized UFA 44 Mount Charles Stewart is located in the Bow Valley just north of Canmore 45 The peak was named for him in 1928 Federal politics editFollowing the 1921 federal election William Lyon Mackenzie King s Liberals came to power in Ottawa They had not won any seats in Alberta and Stewart was invited to join King s cabinet as Minister of the Interior and Mines which included responsibility as Superintendent General of Indian Affairs 37 He won a 1922 by election in the Quebec seat of Argenteuil before shifting to the more familiar territory of Edmonton West in the 1925 election he was re elected there in 1926 and 1930 In the 1935 election he ran in the new riding of Jasper Edson where he was defeated by Social Crediter Walter Frederick Kuhl 46 nbsp The signing ceremony for the resource transfer agreement Stewart is seated second from left As a cabinet minister Stewart aggressively marketed Canada s coal both domestically and internationally for which he was honoured by Alberta s coal producers at a banquet and later awarded the Randolph Bruce Gold Medal in Science by the Canadian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy He took a great interest in water power and advised the government on jurisdictional issues surrounding the Niagara St Mary and Milk Rivers 46 In 1927 he served as Canada s representative at the League of Nations 2 As Minister of the Interior he oversaw the 1927 creation of Prince Albert National Park 47 Ironically given the attacks he had sustained as Premier from Alexander Grant MacKay he was part of the federal delegation that finally negotiated the transfer of resource control from the federal to the Alberta provincial government in December 1929 48 The same agreement transferred resource rights to Saskatchewan and Manitoba After it was signed but before it took effect Manitoba Premier John Bracken concluded an agreement with the Winnipeg Electric Company a private concern to develop a hydroelectric dam at Seven Sisters Reach Because resource rights were still controlled by the federal government the deal required federal approval Stewart advocated withholding this approval in deference to Manitoba public opinion which favoured public ownership of such projects but King honoured a provision of the resource transfer agreement that required the wishes of provincial governments to be respected until the transfer was complete and granted approval 49 Stewart s preference for public over private ownership extended to King s planned creation of the Bank of Canada Stewart wanted the new institution entirely under the control of the government but King preferred an arrangement whereby half of its directors would be appointed by the government and half by private shareholders and suggested that advocates of public ownership might find themselves more at home in the socialist Cooperative Commonwealth Federation than in his Liberal caucus 50 nbsp Charles Stewart as a federal cabinet ministerDespite Stewart s involvement in transferring resource rights to Alberta his relationship with the UFA government that had defeated him in 1921 was frosty Lakeland College historian Franklin Foster in his biography of UFA Premier John Edward Brownlee alleges that this antipathy influenced Stewart s preference for private corporations over the Alberta government in granting hydroelectric power permits 51 He also feuded with then Premier Brownlee over development in Alberta s national parks Stewart favouring large scale private development and Brownlee opposing it causing King to record in his diary Brownlee strikes me as being superior to Mr Stewart who is handicapped in his dislike of Brownlee 52 When King sought to absorb Progressives into his Liberal Party to form a stronger coalition against the Conservatives Stewart opposed cooperation with the UFA leaders who made up a large part of the Progressives Albertan base 53 54 While King was inclined to view UFA politicians like Progressives elsewhere as Liberals in a hurry who were fundamentally comfortable with his government and preferred it to the Conservatives 55 Stewart understood that the UFA was a distinct group whose members were in many respect more conservative than liberal 56 King dismissed his minister s views as being the result of Stewart s acrimonious history with the UFA 57 In fact Stewart did not enjoy King s confidence 58 Though he brought him into his cabinet in 1921 in part at the urging of Progressive leader Thomas Crerar King found Stewart to be an inadequate protector of western interests especially in his advocacy of tariff reduction which King found lacklustre and did not trust his political advice on the west 59 By 1925 he was considering appointing Stewart to the Senate to remove him from active political involvement but was handicapped by the absence of any other Alberta representation in his cabinet 60 In 1926 Stewart served as an emissary from King to recruit Saskatchewan Premier Charles Avery Dunning to the federal cabinet 61 the mission fulfilled King kept Stewart in cabinet but wrote in his diary that all matters pertaining to Alberta were to be left to Dunning to do as he thinks best 56 By 1927 King complained that Stewart had no grip on the province of which he had once been Premier 62 and in 1930 he wrote Organization in Alberta is terrible Stewart is worse than useless is like an old woman with no real control of situation 63 In the 1930 federal election Dunning and Crerar were both defeated King complained that it was perfectly terrible to have Stewart alone representing the West 64 When Stewart too went down to defeat in 1935 King was pleased not to have to consider him in assembling his new cabinet and opted instead to leave Alberta unrepresented to punish it for failing to elect any Liberals 65 Post political life editAfter Stewart s defeat in 1935 he was appointed by George V to chair the Canadian section of the International Joint Commission in recognition of his expertise on international water boundary issues In 1938 he was appointed chair of the Canadian section of the British Columbia Yukon Alaska Highway Commission 46 In these capacities he travelled across Canada visiting his son George at the family homestead near Killam at every opportunity 66 He died December 6 1946 leaving an estate of 21 961 67 Born in one of Canada s original provinces Stewart moved west as part of a vast migration to the prairies and settled in Alberta the year it became a province As Alberta grew Stewart played an increasingly important political role in it until he joined the federal government to become Alberta s voice there ultimately helping it achieve constitutional equality with the older provinces by transferring to its government control of its resources As Mackenzie King eulogized him in more respects than one Mr Stewart s career mirrored the development of Canada itself 67 Electoral record editAs party leader edit Party Party Leader ofcandidates Seats Popular Vote 1917 Elected Change Change United Farmers Henry Wise Wood 45 38 86 250 28 92 Liberal Charles Stewart 61 34 15 55 9 101 584 34 07 8 99 Dominion Labor Holmes Jowett 10 1 4 300 33 987 11 40 8 56 Independent 18 2 3 50 0 28 794 9 66 4 44 Conservative Albert Ewing 13 19 1 68 94 7 32 734 10 98 26 4 Independent Labour 7 10 733 3 60 Socialist 2 0 0 2 628 0 88 0 26 Independent Liberal 1 1 467 0 49 Sub total 157 56 61 8 9 298 177 100 Soldiers vote Province at large 0 2 20 33 Total 157 58 61 5 2 298 177 100 Sources Elections Alberta Alberta provincial election results Elections Alberta Archived from the original on 2008 02 11 Retrieved 2008 01 13 As MLA edit vte1921 Alberta general election Sedgewick Party Candidate Votes Liberal Charles Stewart Acclaimed 69 vte1917 Alberta general election Sedgewick Party Candidate Votes Liberal Charles Stewart 1 657 63 1 Progressive Conservative John R Lavell 971 36 9 69 vte1913 Alberta general election Sedgewick Party Candidate Votes Liberal Charles Stewart 889 70 1 Progressive Conservative W Watson 371 29 9 69 vteAlberta provincial by election 1912 Sedgewick Party Candidate Votes Liberal Charles Stewart 2 022 67 7 Progressive Conservative William John Blair 963 32 3 69 vte1909 Alberta general election Sedgewick Party Candidate Votes Liberal Charles Stewart Acclaimed 69 As MP edit 1935 Canadian federal election Jasper Edson Party Candidate Votes Social Credit Walter Frederick Kuhl 7 208 49 1 Liberal Charles Stewart 5 405 36 8 Co operative Commonwealth George Elzy Bevington 2 067 14 1 History of federal ridings since 1867 Jasper Edson Elections Canada Archived from the original on 2009 06 09 Retrieved 2008 01 13 1930 Canadian federal election Edmonton West Party Candidate Votes Liberal Charles Stewart 9 223 50 7 Conservative Frederick C Jamieson 8 960 49 3 70 Canadian federal by election October 5 1926 Edmonton West Party Candidate Votes Liberal Charles Stewart Acclaimed 70 1926 Canadian federal election Edmonton West Party Candidate Votes Liberal Charles Stewart 7 223 55 6 Conservative Frederick C Jamieson 5 772 44 4 70 1925 Canadian federal election Edmonton West Party Candidate Votes Liberal Charles Stewart 6 394 48 8 Conservative James McCrie Douglas 4 706 35 9 Labour James East 2 007 15 3 70 Canadian federal by election 1922 Argenteuil Party Candidate Votes Liberal Charles Stewart Acclaimed 71 References editCitations edit a b c Jaques 2004 p 44 a b c The Honourable Charles Stewart 1917 21 Legislative Assembly of Alberta Archived from the original on 2008 01 13 Retrieved 2008 01 17 8 Jul 1905 1 The Province at Newspapers com Newspapers com Retrieved 2021 10 17 a b c d Jaques 2004 p 45 Alberta provincial election results Elections Alberta Archived from the original on 2008 02 11 Retrieved 2008 01 13 Thomas 1959 p 84 Thomas 1959 p 125 Thomas 1959 p 127 a b c Jaques 2004 p 46 Thomas 1959 p 150 Thomas 1959 p 135 a b Thomas 1959 p 179 a b c Thomas 1959 p 182 a b Thomas 1959 p 180 Thomas 1959 p 88 Jaques 2004 p 47 a b c d Thomas 1959 p 183 Thomas 1959 p 194 Thomas 1959 pp 159 160 a b Thomas 1959 p 192 a b Thomas 1959 p 193 Thomas 1959 p 136 a b Thomas 1959 p 195 a b c d Jaques 2004 p 50 Jaques 2004 p 51 Thomas 1959 p 190 Thomas 1959 p 191 Thomas 1959 p 189 Jaques 2004 pp 49 50 Thomas 1959 p 200 Rennie 2000 p 128 Rennie 2000 p 132 Rennie 2000 p 180 Mardon amp Mardon 1993 p 53 Thomas 1959 p 196 Rennie 2000 p 184 a b c d e Jaques 2004 p 52 a b c d Thomas 1959 p 205 Henderson s Edmonton and Strathcona City Directory Henderson Directories Limited 1921 p 546 OCLC 1296904192 Thomas 1959 p 202 Thomas 1959 pp 204 205 a b Thomas 1959 p 204 Jaques 2004 pp 51 52 a b Thomas 1959 p 207 Lakusta Ernie 2004 Banff amp Lake Louise History Explorer Canmore AB Altitude Publishing Canada Ltd p 29 ISBN 1 55153 636 6 a b c Jaques 2004 p 53 Wardhaugh 2000 p 130 Jaques 2004 pp 54 55 Wardhaugh 2000 p 144 Wardhaugh 2000 p 179 Foster 1981 p 102 amp 147 Foster 1981 p 167 Foster 1981 p 129 Wardhaugh 2000 pp 66 amp 114 Wardhaugh 2000 pp 124 amp 149 a b Wardhaugh 2000 p 114 Wardhaugh 2000 p 149 Wardhaugh 2000 p 152 Wardhaugh 2000 pp 84 amp 87 Wardhaugh 2000 pp 106 amp 114 amp 125 Wardhaugh 2000 p 111 Wardhaugh 2000 p 134 Wardhaugh 2000 p 159 Wardhaugh 2000 p 160 Wardhaugh 2000 p 190 Jaques 2004 pp 53 54 a b Jaques 2004 p 55 U F A Now Has 39 Members In Legislature So Recount Shows Edmonton Journal July 19 1921 p 1 a b c d e Mardon amp Mardon 1993 p 117 a b c d History of federal ridings since 1867 Edmonton West Elections Canada Archived from the original on 2009 06 09 Retrieved 2008 01 13 History of federal ridings since 1867 Argenteuil Elections Canada Archived from the original on 2009 06 09 Retrieved 2008 01 13 Works cited edit Foster Franklin L 1981 John E Brownlee A Biography Lloydminster Alberta Foster Learning Inc ISBN 978 1 55220 004 9 Jaques Carrol 2004 Charles Stewart In Bradford J Rennie ed Alberta Premiers of the Twentieth Century Regina Saskatchewan Canadian Plains Research Center University of Regina ISBN 0 88977 151 0 Mardon Ernest Mardon Austin 1993 Alberta Election Results 1882 1992 Edmonton Documentary Heritage Society of Alberta Rennie Bradford 2000 The Rise of Agrarian Democracy The United Farmers and Farm Women of Alberta 1909 1921 Toronto Ontario University of Toronto Press Incorporated ISBN 0 8020 8374 9 Thomas Lewis Gwynne 1959 The Liberal Party in Alberta Toronto Ontario University of Toronto Press ISBN 9780802050830 Wardhaugh Robert Alexander 2000 MacKenzie King and the Prairie West Toronto Ontario University of Toronto Press Incorporated ISBN 0 8020 4733 5 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Charles Stewart premier amp oldid 1185386881, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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