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Charles Wilson Cross

Charles Wilson Cross (November 30, 1872 – June 2, 1928) was a Canadian politician who served in the Legislative Assembly of Alberta and the House of Commons of Canada. He was also the first Attorney-General of Alberta. Born in Ontario, he studied law at Osgoode Hall Law School before coming west to practise in Edmonton. He became active with the Liberal Party of Canada, and when Alberta was created in 1905 he was chosen by Premier Alexander Cameron Rutherford to be its first Attorney-General. Implicated in the Alberta and Great Waterways Railway scandal, he resigned in 1910 along with the rest of Rutherford's government.

Charles Wilson Cross
Member of the House of Commons of Canada
In office
October 29, 1925 – September 14, 1926
Preceded byNew district
Succeeded byDonald Ferdinand Kellner
ConstituencyAthabaska
Member of the Legislative Assembly of Alberta
In office
March 25, 1913 – May 1925
Preceded byNew district
Succeeded byChristopher Pattinson
ConstituencyEdson
In office
November 9, 1905 – June 7, 1917
Serving with John Alexander McDougall (1909–1913)
Albert Ewing (1913–1917)
Preceded byNew district
Succeeded byDistrict abolished
ConstituencyEdmonton
Attorney-General of Alberta
In office
May 4, 1912 – August 23, 1918
Preceded byCharles R. Mitchell
Succeeded byJohn R. Boyle
In office
September 9, 1905 – June 1, 1910
Preceded byNew position
Succeeded byCharles R. Mitchell
Personal details
BornNovember 30, 1872
Madoc, Ontario
DiedJune 2, 1928(1928-06-02) (aged 55)
Calgary, Alberta
Political partyAlberta Liberal Party, Liberal Party of Canada
SpouseAnnie Louisa Lynde
ChildrenOne son, two daughters
ResidenceEdmonton
Alma materUniversity of Toronto, Osgoode Hall Law School
OccupationLawyer

As a backbencher, he became the leader of Liberals opposed to the government of Rutherford's successor, Arthur Sifton, until Sifton re-appointed him Attorney-General in 1912. Cross served in this capacity under Sifton and his successor Charles Stewart until 1918, when Stewart fired him after receiving no response to his request for Cross's resignation. Cross remained in provincial politics until 1925, but in a radically diminished role. After leaving provincial politics, he was elected to the Canadian House of Commons, only to be defeated in his 1926 re-election bid. He died in 1928.

Early life edit

Cross was born in Madoc, Ontario to merchant Thomas Cross and his wife, Marie Mouncey. He studied at Upper Canada College, the University of Toronto, and Osgoode Hall Law School. He moved west to Edmonton in 1897,[1] where he opened a law practice with William Short; it exists today as Duncan Craig LLP.[2] When the idea of creating one or more new provinces out of the Northwest Territories gained currency, Cross was one of three people selected by Edmonton City Council to travel to Ottawa and ensure that Edmonton's interests were respected.[1]

Provincial politics edit

Early provincial career edit

Cross was a Liberal, and fast established himself was one of the party's leading Edmonton lights. By some assessments, he was the second most influential Liberal in the city after Frank Oliver, the owner of the Edmonton Bulletin and local Member of Parliament.[1][3] Once the decision was made to create the province of Alberta, the question emerged of who would govern it: the Northwest Territories were governed on a non-partisan basis by Premier Frederick W. A. G. Haultain, who was a Conservative in federal politics. Some Liberals, such as Peter Talbot, were amenable to Haultain's becoming the first Premier of Alberta, either as the head of a non-partisan government or one formed by a coalition of Liberals and Conservatives. Cross was not among them.[4]

Cross's view prevailed, and Alberta's first Lieutenant-Governor, Liberal George Bulyea, invited Alexander Cameron Rutherford to form a government. Haultain went to Saskatchewan, created from a portion of the Northwest Territories at the same time as Alberta was, to lead the Provincial Rights Party.[5] Though Cross was only 32, Rutherford named him to his cabinet as Alberta's first Attorney-General.[3] In consequence, he was required to contest the 1905 election. He did so in the district of Edmonton, against Conservative William Antrobus Griesbach. Griesbach fought his campaign on the Liberal federal government's imposition on Alberta of a requirement to fund separate schools, an imposition to which older provinces were not subject.[6] Cross won the election with such a margin that Griesbach lost his deposit.[7]

One of the first questions considered by the new Legislative Assembly of Alberta was the choice of provincial capital. The terms of autonomy had made Edmonton the provisional capital, but there was a movement to make Calgary the permanent choice. This movement was led in the legislature by Minister of Public Works William Henry Cushing, Cross's cabinet colleague, who argued that it would be cheaper to build a legislature building in Calgary than in Edmonton and that Calgary was the economic centre of the province and therefore ought to be capital. Cross countered that Edmonton's history as capital of the Canadian fur trade and its geographic location close to the centre of the province gave it the stronger claim. Edmonton was eventually selected by a vote of 16 to 8.[8] It would not be the last issue on which Cross and Cushing disagreed.

As Attorney-General, Cross was responsible for overseeing prosecutions. He was especially aggressive in his enforcement of the Sabbath Observance Act, which prohibited most business activities on Sundays.[9] He also introduced new workers' compensation legislation, the highlight of which was making compensation automatic, rather than the result of a lawsuit by the injured worker.[10] Though the bill addressed some of the labour movement's concerns,[1] there remained many criticisms: it failed to fine employers responsible for workplace hazards, did not apply to injuries sustained while building or repairing buildings of less than 40 feet (12 m) in height, did not protect casual labourers, and limited compensation to a maximum of Can$1,500. In response to these concerns, Cross lowered the minimum building height to 30 feet (9.1 m) and raised the maximum compensation to $1,800. To assuage farm leaders, he also included an exemption for farm labour.[10]

Railway scandal edit

Cross was re-elected in the 1909 election as one of two members elected in the newly expanded Edmonton district.[11] Soon after, in February 1910, Cushing resigned from cabinet, stating that he disagreed with Rutherford's approach to railway policy and specifically with his actions regarding the Alberta and Great Waterways Railway (A&GW). The A&GW was one of several new railways to take advantage of the government's offer, made under considerable public pressure, of loan guarantees. Cushing and John R. Boyle attacked Rutherford's government, with the latter charging that the Deputy Attorney-General, S. B. Woods, had removed papers from the government's files on the A&GW. Cross denied these charges on his deputy's behalf.[12] Boyle followed with a motion that the assets of the A&GW, which he believed was taking advantage of the government's guarantees to build a sub-standard railway at government expense, be expropriated.[13] Cross led the government's opposition to the motion.[14]

On March 9, Cross abruptly resigned as Attorney-General; Woods resigned the next day. Cross gave as his reason that Rutherford had told him that Cushing was re-entering cabinet, and Cross felt that that made his position untenable. Cushing gave a different account: he said that he had been asked by Rutherford to re-enter cabinet, and that the Premier had told him that if he did, Cross would resign. However, he denied ever having agreed to do so, and accused Cross of fabricating his story completely. Rutherford stayed silent until March 11, when he announced that he had refused Cross's resignation, and that he was still Attorney-General.[15] Soon after, Boyle made his own set of accusations, saying that agents of the liquor license department, which was under Cross, had been demanding bribes from hoteliers in exchange for licenses and that Cross was aware of this. Cross denied the charge.[16]

The crisis divided the Liberal Party into two camps: the pro-government Liberals, led by Cross and Rutherford, and the insurgent Liberals, led by Cushing and Boyle. The insurgents' objective was to replace Rutherford with Cushing. Though most important Liberals outside the legislature, including Bulyea and Oliver, lacked confidence in Rutherford, they had little more in Cushing.[17] Some newspapers characterized the struggle as the visible element of a battle for influence between Oliver, long Alberta's most prominent Liberal, and Cross, seen as its rising star.[18] Though Rutherford never actually lost a confidence motion, Bulyea pressured him to resign in favour of Arthur Sifton, the province's chief justice. Several of Cross's supporters attempted to extract a promise to keep Cross as Attorney-General in exchange for their support of Sifton's government, but Sifton was unwilling to agree. Rutherford eventually and reluctantly complied with Bulyea's wishes, and the rest of his government, including Cross, followed suit.[19] Subsequent rumours suggested that Cross and his followers had agreed to resign only because of a belief that Sifton would be appointed to the Supreme Court of Canada after approximately a year as Premier, with Cross then being asked to form a government.[20] A subsequent commission declined to find Cross guilty of wrongdoing in relation to the A&GW incident, but criticized him and Rutherford for granting over-generous terms to the railway.[21]

Backbenches and return to cabinet edit

In keeping with Sifton's policy of excluding all prominent players in the A&GW affair from cabinet, Cross was not re-appointed (Cushing, Rutherford, and Boyle were also left out).[18] Despite this, Cross declared his support for Sifton's government while restating his admiration for Rutherford's.[20] In response to the A&GW's default of its obligations to the government, Sifton introduced a bill confiscating the money the A&GW had raised through the sale of government-guaranteed bonds. Cross, still a supporter of building the A&GW and concerned that the bill did not include a commitment to use the money to do so, opposed it.[22] The bill passed, but was disallowed by the courts. Sifton, left with little choice but to use the money for the purpose for which it had been raised, announced a new policy of railway construction.[23] At the same time, he invited Cross to resume his post as Attorney-General. Boyle was also admitted to cabinet, as Minister of Education; Cushing and Rutherford, the other major players in the A&GW affair, had withdrawn from the limelight, and neither would return to the legislature after the 1913 election. Cross accepted Sifton's offer, telling the public that Sifton's new railway policy "made it proper for me to support and join his government".[24]

In keeping with custom at the time, once appointed to cabinet Cross resigned his seat in the legislature and contested it in a by-election. His by-election was held at the same time as four others, and while Liberal papers were unhesitant about endorsing the Liberal candidates in those, in Edmonton they gave Cross a somewhat bumpier ride. The Calgary Albertan, in an editorial advocating the return of Liberal candidates in all five by-elections, criticized Cross as "disloyal to [Sifton] in the beginning, and doubtless will be to the end." The Edmonton Bulletin, still owned by Oliver, complained that while in the other four by-elections voters were being asked to judge Sifton's government, in Edmonton it appeared that they were being asked to judge Rutherford's.[25] Cross defeated his main opponent, Conservative Albert Ewing, but by a much smaller margin than he had managed in 1905 and 1909.[26] Ewing claimed electoral fraud and appealed the outcome to the courts, but the 1913 election pre-empted his appeal.[27] In that election, perhaps recalling the narrowness of his by-election win, Cross ran in two ridings, Edmonton and Edson. He won both (Ewing was the second victor from the two-member Edmonton district), making him the only person in Alberta history to represent two constituencies at the same time (though not the only one to try: Sifton also did so in 1913, and Boyle would in 1921).[28] The Edmonton contest was a close contest and only after several recounts was Cross declared a winner.[29]

Prohibition was gaining currency in Alberta: the Conservatives had included it in their 1913 platform, and it was supported by the increasingly powerful United Farmers of Alberta (UFA).[30] The government generally opposed the idea, and Cross held up Manitoba as example of its failures.[31] But the government had also (at the UFA's behest) introduced direct democracy measures, one of which allowed citizens to initiate plebiscites. The well-organized temperance movement did so on prohibition, which was endorsed by a majority of voters in the ensuing plebiscite; the legislature passed the Prohibition Act in the spring of 1916.[32] As Attorney-General, Cross was responsible for enforcing it.[33]

Conscription and the Stewart cabinet edit

In 1917, the Alberta Liberal Party, held delicately together since 1910, burst once again into conflict with the conscription crisis. The Conservative federal government of Robert Borden supported imposing conscription to help win World War I, and most of English Canada supported him. The Liberal leader, Wilfrid Laurier, opposed conscription, but many of the party's English-speaking members supported it and defected to a Borden-led Union government. This dispute had repercussions in the Alberta party: Sifton supported conscription, and shortly after winning the 1917 election (in which Cross was re-elected in Edson but did not run in Edmonton) resigned as Premier to move to federal politics and a ministry in Borden's government.[34] Cross opposed conscription. In this he was joined by Oliver, and the two put aside years of animosity to campaign together for Laurier in the 1917 federal election. Cross regarded Laurier as something of a hero, and proclaimed that he was "fairly convinced that the first duty of Canadians to their country is to get rid of the crowd of profiteers at Ottawa who have brought the country to its present condition."[35]

Sifton's successor as Premier was Charles Stewart, the Minister of Public Works in his cabinet. Stewart, who supported conscription but did not actively campaign for it or the Unionists, kept Cross as Attorney-General, despite rumours that he would not.[36] Cross's major challenge was enforcing prohibition, which was proving challenging. The Conservatives, and in particular George Douglas Stanley, were unreluctant to accuse Cross of mismanagement.[37] In the meantime, a rift was opening between Cross and Stewart (whom the Conservatives accused, somewhat ironically, of being unduly influenced by his Attorney-General). Stewart found Cross neglectful of his duties, and after Cross refused to dismiss two detectives from his department whose work Stewart felt could be better done by the Alberta Provincial Police, Stewart requested his resignation. When twelve days passed without a reply from Cross, Stewart fired him August 26, 1918. His replacement as Attorney-General was Boyle, his nemesis of the Alberta and Great Waterways era.[38]

Cross remained in the legislature for several more years, but took no active role in its proceedings, and soon ceased to be regarded as a major force.[38] He was re-elected in the 1921 election, making him and Boyle the only veterans of the first legislature still in office. The UFA, fielding candidates for the first time, won a majority of seats in the election, and Stewart resigned as Premier.[39] Cross continued his indifferent performance as MLA until May 1925, when he resigned to enter federal politics.[40]

Federal career and later life edit

Cross ran as a Liberal in the 1925 federal election in the riding of Athabaska, and defeated Donald Ferdinand Kellner, the Progressive incumbent from Edmonton East. Stewart, who had also left provincial politics, was elected in the adjacent Edmonton West. The Liberals, under incumbent Prime Minister William Lyon Mackenzie King, won fewer seats than the Conservatives, but King decided to remain as Prime Minister anyway. As a result, Cross sat in the House of Commons of Canada throughout the King-Byng Affair. In the ensuing 1926 election, Cross was soundly defeated in a rematch with Kellner. Charles Wilson Cross died of a heart attack June 2, 1928, in Calgary.[1]

Electoral record edit

1926 Canadian federal election: Athabaska
Party Candidate Votes %
United Farmers of Alberta Donald Ferdinand Kellner 4,870 63.74
Liberal Charles Wilson Cross 2,770 36.26
Source: "History of Federal Ridings since 1867:Athabaska, Alberta". Parliament of Canada. Retrieved October 27, 2009.
1921 Alberta general election results (Edson)[41] Turnout N.A.
Affiliation Candidate Votes %
  Liberal Charles Wilson Cross 1,321 57.94%
  Labour John Diamond 959 42.06%
1917 Alberta general election results (Edson)[42] Turnout N.A.
Affiliation Candidate Votes %
  Liberal Charles Wilson Cross 1,116 62.91%
  Conservative J. R. McIntosh 455 25.65%
Socialist John Reid 203 11.44%
1913 Alberta general election results (Edson)[43] Turnout N.A.
Affiliation Candidate Votes %
  Liberal Charles Wilson Cross 671 51.03%
  Conservative H. H. Verge 644 48.97%
1913 Alberta general election results (Edmonton)[44] (two candidates elected) Turnout N.A.
Affiliation Candidate Votes %
  Liberal Charles Wilson Cross 5,407 27.83%
  Conservative Albert Ewing 5,107 26.29%
  Liberal Alexander Grant MacKay 4,913 25.29%
  Conservative William Antrobus Griesbach 4,499 23.16%
  Independent J. D. Blayney 643 3.31%
1912 by-election results (Edmonton)[26] Turnout N.A.
Affiliation Candidate Votes %
  Liberal Charles Wilson Cross 1,802 48.47%
  Conservative Albert Ewing 1,733 46.61%
Socialist J. R. Knight 183 4.92%
1909 Alberta general election results (Edmonton)[11] (two candidates elected) Turnout N.A.
Affiliation Candidate Votes %
  Liberal Charles Wilson Cross 3,282 40.01%
  Liberal John Alexander McDougall 2,977 36.30%
  Conservative Albert Ewing 1,595 19.45%
  Independent John Gailbraith 348 4.24%
1905 Alberta general election results (Edmonton)[45] Turnout N.A.
Affiliation Candidate Votes %
  Liberal Charles Wilson Cross 1,209 70.09%
  Conservative William Antrobus Griesbach 516 29.91%

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b c d e Finkel, Alvin (2005). "Cross, Charles Wilson". In Cook, Ramsay; Bélanger, Réal (eds.). Dictionary of Canadian Biography. Vol. XV (1921–1930) (online ed.). University of Toronto Press.
  2. ^ "Duncan & Craig LLP". Retrieved October 28, 2009.
  3. ^ a b Thomas 21
  4. ^ Thomas 15
  5. ^ Thomas 18–20
  6. ^ Thomas 24
  7. ^ Thomas 28
  8. ^ Thomas 38
  9. ^ Thomas 68
  10. ^ a b Thomas 57
  11. ^ a b "Election results for Edmonton, 1909". Alberta Online Encyclopedia. Retrieved October 27, 2009.
  12. ^ Thomas 72
  13. ^ Thomas 74
  14. ^ Thomas 75
  15. ^ Thomas 82–83
  16. ^ Thomas 85
  17. ^ Thomas 87
  18. ^ a b Thomas 91
  19. ^ Thomas 89–90
  20. ^ a b Thomas 92
  21. ^ Thomas 104
  22. ^ Thomas 110
  23. ^ Thomas 121
  24. ^ Thomas 125–126
  25. ^ Thomas 126
  26. ^ a b . Elections Alberta. Archived from the original on June 7, 2009. Retrieved October 28, 2009.
  27. ^ Thomas 127
  28. ^ Thomas 144
  29. ^ Edmonton Bulletin, April 29, 1913
  30. ^ Thomas 136, 138–139
  31. ^ Thomas 139
  32. ^ Thomas 157–160
  33. ^ Thomas 161
  34. ^ Thomas 179
  35. ^ Thomas 181–182
  36. ^ Thomas 180–181
  37. ^ Thomas 168
  38. ^ a b Thomas 194
  39. ^ Thomas 204
  40. ^ "Parliamentarian file – Complete file – Cross, Charles Wilson". Parliament of Canada. Retrieved October 29, 2009.
  41. ^ "Election results for Edson, 1921". Alberta Online Encyclopedia. Retrieved October 27, 2009.
  42. ^ "Election results for Edson, 1917". Alberta Online Encyclopedia. Retrieved October 27, 2009.
  43. ^ "Election results for Edson, 1913". Alberta Online Encyclopedia. Retrieved October 27, 2009.
  44. ^ "Election results for Edmonton, 1913". Alberta Online Encyclopedia. Retrieved October 27, 2009.
  45. ^ "Election results for Edmonton, 1905". Alberta Online Encyclopedia. Retrieved October 27, 2009.

References edit

External links edit

charles, wilson, cross, november, 1872, june, 1928, canadian, politician, served, legislative, assembly, alberta, house, commons, canada, also, first, attorney, general, alberta, born, ontario, studied, osgoode, hall, school, before, coming, west, practise, ed. Charles Wilson Cross November 30 1872 June 2 1928 was a Canadian politician who served in the Legislative Assembly of Alberta and the House of Commons of Canada He was also the first Attorney General of Alberta Born in Ontario he studied law at Osgoode Hall Law School before coming west to practise in Edmonton He became active with the Liberal Party of Canada and when Alberta was created in 1905 he was chosen by Premier Alexander Cameron Rutherford to be its first Attorney General Implicated in the Alberta and Great Waterways Railway scandal he resigned in 1910 along with the rest of Rutherford s government Charles Wilson CrossMember of the House of Commons of CanadaIn office October 29 1925 September 14 1926Preceded byNew districtSucceeded byDonald Ferdinand KellnerConstituencyAthabaskaMember of the Legislative Assembly of AlbertaIn office March 25 1913 May 1925Preceded byNew districtSucceeded byChristopher PattinsonConstituencyEdsonIn office November 9 1905 June 7 1917Serving with John Alexander McDougall 1909 1913 Albert Ewing 1913 1917 Preceded byNew districtSucceeded byDistrict abolishedConstituencyEdmontonAttorney General of AlbertaIn office May 4 1912 August 23 1918Preceded byCharles R MitchellSucceeded byJohn R BoyleIn office September 9 1905 June 1 1910Preceded byNew positionSucceeded byCharles R MitchellPersonal detailsBornNovember 30 1872Madoc OntarioDiedJune 2 1928 1928 06 02 aged 55 Calgary AlbertaPolitical partyAlberta Liberal Party Liberal Party of CanadaSpouseAnnie Louisa LyndeChildrenOne son two daughtersResidenceEdmontonAlma materUniversity of Toronto Osgoode Hall Law SchoolOccupationLawyer As a backbencher he became the leader of Liberals opposed to the government of Rutherford s successor Arthur Sifton until Sifton re appointed him Attorney General in 1912 Cross served in this capacity under Sifton and his successor Charles Stewart until 1918 when Stewart fired him after receiving no response to his request for Cross s resignation Cross remained in provincial politics until 1925 but in a radically diminished role After leaving provincial politics he was elected to the Canadian House of Commons only to be defeated in his 1926 re election bid He died in 1928 Contents 1 Early life 2 Provincial politics 2 1 Early provincial career 2 2 Railway scandal 2 3 Backbenches and return to cabinet 2 4 Conscription and the Stewart cabinet 3 Federal career and later life 4 Electoral record 5 Notes 6 References 7 External linksEarly life editCross was born in Madoc Ontario to merchant Thomas Cross and his wife Marie Mouncey He studied at Upper Canada College the University of Toronto and Osgoode Hall Law School He moved west to Edmonton in 1897 1 where he opened a law practice with William Short it exists today as Duncan Craig LLP 2 When the idea of creating one or more new provinces out of the Northwest Territories gained currency Cross was one of three people selected by Edmonton City Council to travel to Ottawa and ensure that Edmonton s interests were respected 1 Provincial politics editEarly provincial career edit Cross was a Liberal and fast established himself was one of the party s leading Edmonton lights By some assessments he was the second most influential Liberal in the city after Frank Oliver the owner of the Edmonton Bulletin and local Member of Parliament 1 3 Once the decision was made to create the province of Alberta the question emerged of who would govern it the Northwest Territories were governed on a non partisan basis by Premier Frederick W A G Haultain who was a Conservative in federal politics Some Liberals such as Peter Talbot were amenable to Haultain s becoming the first Premier of Alberta either as the head of a non partisan government or one formed by a coalition of Liberals and Conservatives Cross was not among them 4 Cross s view prevailed and Alberta s first Lieutenant Governor Liberal George Bulyea invited Alexander Cameron Rutherford to form a government Haultain went to Saskatchewan created from a portion of the Northwest Territories at the same time as Alberta was to lead the Provincial Rights Party 5 Though Cross was only 32 Rutherford named him to his cabinet as Alberta s first Attorney General 3 In consequence he was required to contest the 1905 election He did so in the district of Edmonton against Conservative William Antrobus Griesbach Griesbach fought his campaign on the Liberal federal government s imposition on Alberta of a requirement to fund separate schools an imposition to which older provinces were not subject 6 Cross won the election with such a margin that Griesbach lost his deposit 7 One of the first questions considered by the new Legislative Assembly of Alberta was the choice of provincial capital The terms of autonomy had made Edmonton the provisional capital but there was a movement to make Calgary the permanent choice This movement was led in the legislature by Minister of Public Works William Henry Cushing Cross s cabinet colleague who argued that it would be cheaper to build a legislature building in Calgary than in Edmonton and that Calgary was the economic centre of the province and therefore ought to be capital Cross countered that Edmonton s history as capital of the Canadian fur trade and its geographic location close to the centre of the province gave it the stronger claim Edmonton was eventually selected by a vote of 16 to 8 8 It would not be the last issue on which Cross and Cushing disagreed As Attorney General Cross was responsible for overseeing prosecutions He was especially aggressive in his enforcement of the Sabbath Observance Act which prohibited most business activities on Sundays 9 He also introduced new workers compensation legislation the highlight of which was making compensation automatic rather than the result of a lawsuit by the injured worker 10 Though the bill addressed some of the labour movement s concerns 1 there remained many criticisms it failed to fine employers responsible for workplace hazards did not apply to injuries sustained while building or repairing buildings of less than 40 feet 12 m in height did not protect casual labourers and limited compensation to a maximum of Can 1 500 In response to these concerns Cross lowered the minimum building height to 30 feet 9 1 m and raised the maximum compensation to 1 800 To assuage farm leaders he also included an exemption for farm labour 10 Railway scandal edit Main article Alberta and Great Waterways Railway scandal Cross was re elected in the 1909 election as one of two members elected in the newly expanded Edmonton district 11 Soon after in February 1910 Cushing resigned from cabinet stating that he disagreed with Rutherford s approach to railway policy and specifically with his actions regarding the Alberta and Great Waterways Railway A amp GW The A amp GW was one of several new railways to take advantage of the government s offer made under considerable public pressure of loan guarantees Cushing and John R Boyle attacked Rutherford s government with the latter charging that the Deputy Attorney General S B Woods had removed papers from the government s files on the A amp GW Cross denied these charges on his deputy s behalf 12 Boyle followed with a motion that the assets of the A amp GW which he believed was taking advantage of the government s guarantees to build a sub standard railway at government expense be expropriated 13 Cross led the government s opposition to the motion 14 On March 9 Cross abruptly resigned as Attorney General Woods resigned the next day Cross gave as his reason that Rutherford had told him that Cushing was re entering cabinet and Cross felt that that made his position untenable Cushing gave a different account he said that he had been asked by Rutherford to re enter cabinet and that the Premier had told him that if he did Cross would resign However he denied ever having agreed to do so and accused Cross of fabricating his story completely Rutherford stayed silent until March 11 when he announced that he had refused Cross s resignation and that he was still Attorney General 15 Soon after Boyle made his own set of accusations saying that agents of the liquor license department which was under Cross had been demanding bribes from hoteliers in exchange for licenses and that Cross was aware of this Cross denied the charge 16 The crisis divided the Liberal Party into two camps the pro government Liberals led by Cross and Rutherford and the insurgent Liberals led by Cushing and Boyle The insurgents objective was to replace Rutherford with Cushing Though most important Liberals outside the legislature including Bulyea and Oliver lacked confidence in Rutherford they had little more in Cushing 17 Some newspapers characterized the struggle as the visible element of a battle for influence between Oliver long Alberta s most prominent Liberal and Cross seen as its rising star 18 Though Rutherford never actually lost a confidence motion Bulyea pressured him to resign in favour of Arthur Sifton the province s chief justice Several of Cross s supporters attempted to extract a promise to keep Cross as Attorney General in exchange for their support of Sifton s government but Sifton was unwilling to agree Rutherford eventually and reluctantly complied with Bulyea s wishes and the rest of his government including Cross followed suit 19 Subsequent rumours suggested that Cross and his followers had agreed to resign only because of a belief that Sifton would be appointed to the Supreme Court of Canada after approximately a year as Premier with Cross then being asked to form a government 20 A subsequent commission declined to find Cross guilty of wrongdoing in relation to the A amp GW incident but criticized him and Rutherford for granting over generous terms to the railway 21 Backbenches and return to cabinet edit In keeping with Sifton s policy of excluding all prominent players in the A amp GW affair from cabinet Cross was not re appointed Cushing Rutherford and Boyle were also left out 18 Despite this Cross declared his support for Sifton s government while restating his admiration for Rutherford s 20 In response to the A amp GW s default of its obligations to the government Sifton introduced a bill confiscating the money the A amp GW had raised through the sale of government guaranteed bonds Cross still a supporter of building the A amp GW and concerned that the bill did not include a commitment to use the money to do so opposed it 22 The bill passed but was disallowed by the courts Sifton left with little choice but to use the money for the purpose for which it had been raised announced a new policy of railway construction 23 At the same time he invited Cross to resume his post as Attorney General Boyle was also admitted to cabinet as Minister of Education Cushing and Rutherford the other major players in the A amp GW affair had withdrawn from the limelight and neither would return to the legislature after the 1913 election Cross accepted Sifton s offer telling the public that Sifton s new railway policy made it proper for me to support and join his government 24 In keeping with custom at the time once appointed to cabinet Cross resigned his seat in the legislature and contested it in a by election His by election was held at the same time as four others and while Liberal papers were unhesitant about endorsing the Liberal candidates in those in Edmonton they gave Cross a somewhat bumpier ride The Calgary Albertan in an editorial advocating the return of Liberal candidates in all five by elections criticized Cross as disloyal to Sifton in the beginning and doubtless will be to the end The Edmonton Bulletin still owned by Oliver complained that while in the other four by elections voters were being asked to judge Sifton s government in Edmonton it appeared that they were being asked to judge Rutherford s 25 Cross defeated his main opponent Conservative Albert Ewing but by a much smaller margin than he had managed in 1905 and 1909 26 Ewing claimed electoral fraud and appealed the outcome to the courts but the 1913 election pre empted his appeal 27 In that election perhaps recalling the narrowness of his by election win Cross ran in two ridings Edmonton and Edson He won both Ewing was the second victor from the two member Edmonton district making him the only person in Alberta history to represent two constituencies at the same time though not the only one to try Sifton also did so in 1913 and Boyle would in 1921 28 The Edmonton contest was a close contest and only after several recounts was Cross declared a winner 29 Prohibition was gaining currency in Alberta the Conservatives had included it in their 1913 platform and it was supported by the increasingly powerful United Farmers of Alberta UFA 30 The government generally opposed the idea and Cross held up Manitoba as example of its failures 31 But the government had also at the UFA s behest introduced direct democracy measures one of which allowed citizens to initiate plebiscites The well organized temperance movement did so on prohibition which was endorsed by a majority of voters in the ensuing plebiscite the legislature passed the Prohibition Act in the spring of 1916 32 As Attorney General Cross was responsible for enforcing it 33 Conscription and the Stewart cabinet edit In 1917 the Alberta Liberal Party held delicately together since 1910 burst once again into conflict with the conscription crisis The Conservative federal government of Robert Borden supported imposing conscription to help win World War I and most of English Canada supported him The Liberal leader Wilfrid Laurier opposed conscription but many of the party s English speaking members supported it and defected to a Borden led Union government This dispute had repercussions in the Alberta party Sifton supported conscription and shortly after winning the 1917 election in which Cross was re elected in Edson but did not run in Edmonton resigned as Premier to move to federal politics and a ministry in Borden s government 34 Cross opposed conscription In this he was joined by Oliver and the two put aside years of animosity to campaign together for Laurier in the 1917 federal election Cross regarded Laurier as something of a hero and proclaimed that he was fairly convinced that the first duty of Canadians to their country is to get rid of the crowd of profiteers at Ottawa who have brought the country to its present condition 35 Sifton s successor as Premier was Charles Stewart the Minister of Public Works in his cabinet Stewart who supported conscription but did not actively campaign for it or the Unionists kept Cross as Attorney General despite rumours that he would not 36 Cross s major challenge was enforcing prohibition which was proving challenging The Conservatives and in particular George Douglas Stanley were unreluctant to accuse Cross of mismanagement 37 In the meantime a rift was opening between Cross and Stewart whom the Conservatives accused somewhat ironically of being unduly influenced by his Attorney General Stewart found Cross neglectful of his duties and after Cross refused to dismiss two detectives from his department whose work Stewart felt could be better done by the Alberta Provincial Police Stewart requested his resignation When twelve days passed without a reply from Cross Stewart fired him August 26 1918 His replacement as Attorney General was Boyle his nemesis of the Alberta and Great Waterways era 38 Cross remained in the legislature for several more years but took no active role in its proceedings and soon ceased to be regarded as a major force 38 He was re elected in the 1921 election making him and Boyle the only veterans of the first legislature still in office The UFA fielding candidates for the first time won a majority of seats in the election and Stewart resigned as Premier 39 Cross continued his indifferent performance as MLA until May 1925 when he resigned to enter federal politics 40 Federal career and later life editCross ran as a Liberal in the 1925 federal election in the riding of Athabaska and defeated Donald Ferdinand Kellner the Progressive incumbent from Edmonton East Stewart who had also left provincial politics was elected in the adjacent Edmonton West The Liberals under incumbent Prime Minister William Lyon Mackenzie King won fewer seats than the Conservatives but King decided to remain as Prime Minister anyway As a result Cross sat in the House of Commons of Canada throughout the King Byng Affair In the ensuing 1926 election Cross was soundly defeated in a rematch with Kellner Charles Wilson Cross died of a heart attack June 2 1928 in Calgary 1 Electoral record editvte1926 Canadian federal election Athabaska Party Candidate Votes United Farmers of Alberta Donald Ferdinand Kellner 4 870 63 74 Liberal Charles Wilson Cross 2 770 36 26 Source History of Federal Ridings since 1867 Athabaska Alberta Parliament of Canada Retrieved October 27 2009 vte1925 Canadian federal election Athabaska Party Candidate Votes Liberal Charles Wilson Cross 5 078 Progressive Donald Ferdinand Kellner 3 648 Conservative Charles Jenry Gauvreau 643 1921 Alberta general election results Edson 41 Turnout N A Affiliation Candidate Votes Liberal Charles Wilson Cross 1 321 57 94 Labour John Diamond 959 42 06 1917 Alberta general election results Edson 42 Turnout N A Affiliation Candidate Votes Liberal Charles Wilson Cross 1 116 62 91 Conservative J R McIntosh 455 25 65 Socialist John Reid 203 11 44 1913 Alberta general election results Edson 43 Turnout N A Affiliation Candidate Votes Liberal Charles Wilson Cross 671 51 03 Conservative H H Verge 644 48 97 1913 Alberta general election results Edmonton 44 two candidates elected Turnout N A Affiliation Candidate Votes Liberal Charles Wilson Cross 5 407 27 83 Conservative Albert Ewing 5 107 26 29 Liberal Alexander Grant MacKay 4 913 25 29 Conservative William Antrobus Griesbach 4 499 23 16 Independent J D Blayney 643 3 31 1912 by election results Edmonton 26 Turnout N A Affiliation Candidate Votes Liberal Charles Wilson Cross 1 802 48 47 Conservative Albert Ewing 1 733 46 61 Socialist J R Knight 183 4 92 1909 Alberta general election results Edmonton 11 two candidates elected Turnout N A Affiliation Candidate Votes Liberal Charles Wilson Cross 3 282 40 01 Liberal John Alexander McDougall 2 977 36 30 Conservative Albert Ewing 1 595 19 45 Independent John Gailbraith 348 4 24 1905 Alberta general election results Edmonton 45 Turnout N A Affiliation Candidate Votes Liberal Charles Wilson Cross 1 209 70 09 Conservative William Antrobus Griesbach 516 29 91 Notes edit a b c d e Finkel Alvin 2005 Cross Charles Wilson In Cook Ramsay Belanger Real eds Dictionary of Canadian Biography Vol XV 1921 1930 online ed University of Toronto Press Duncan amp Craig LLP Retrieved October 28 2009 a b Thomas 21 Thomas 15 Thomas 18 20 Thomas 24 Thomas 28 Thomas 38 Thomas 68 a b Thomas 57 a b Election results for Edmonton 1909 Alberta Online Encyclopedia Retrieved October 27 2009 Thomas 72 Thomas 74 Thomas 75 Thomas 82 83 Thomas 85 Thomas 87 a b Thomas 91 Thomas 89 90 a b Thomas 92 Thomas 104 Thomas 110 Thomas 121 Thomas 125 126 Thomas 126 a b Past by election results Elections Alberta Archived from the original on June 7 2009 Retrieved October 28 2009 Thomas 127 Thomas 144 Edmonton Bulletin April 29 1913 Thomas 136 138 139 Thomas 139 Thomas 157 160 Thomas 161 Thomas 179 Thomas 181 182 Thomas 180 181 Thomas 168 a b Thomas 194 Thomas 204 Parliamentarian file Complete file Cross Charles Wilson Parliament of Canada Retrieved October 29 2009 Election results for Edson 1921 Alberta Online Encyclopedia Retrieved October 27 2009 Election results for Edson 1917 Alberta Online Encyclopedia Retrieved October 27 2009 Election results for Edson 1913 Alberta Online Encyclopedia Retrieved October 27 2009 Election results for Edmonton 1913 Alberta Online Encyclopedia Retrieved October 27 2009 Election results for Edmonton 1905 Alberta Online Encyclopedia Retrieved October 27 2009 References editThomas Lewis Gwynne 1959 The Liberal Party in Alberta Toronto Ontario University of Toronto Press ISBN 9780802050830 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Charles Wilson Cross Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Charles Wilson Cross amp oldid 1171057605, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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