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Mackenzie Bowell

Sir Mackenzie Bowell PC KCMG (/ˈb.əl/; December 27, 1823 – December 10, 1917) was a Canadian newspaper publisher and politician, who served as the fifth prime minister of Canada, in office from 1894 to 1896.

Mackenzie Bowell
Bowell in 1891
5th Prime Minister of Canada
In office
December 21, 1894 – April 27, 1896
MonarchVictoria
Governor GeneralThe Earl of Aberdeen
Preceded byJohn Thompson
Succeeded byCharles Tupper
Canadian Senator from Quebec
In office
December 1892 – December 10, 1917
Appointed byJohn Sparrow David Thompson
Member of Parliament
for Hastings North
In office
September 20, 1867 – December 1892
Preceded byRiding established
Succeeded byAlexander Augustus Williamson Carscallen
Personal details
Born(1823-12-27)December 27, 1823
Rickinghall, Suffolk, England
DiedDecember 10, 1917(1917-12-10) (aged 93)
Belleville, Ontario, Canada
Resting placeBelleville Cemetery, Belleville, Ontario, Canada
NationalityCanadian
Political partyConservative
Spouse
Harriet Bowell
(m. 1847; died 1884)
Children9
AwardsOrder of St Michael and St George
Canadian General Service Medal
Colonial Auxiliary Forces Officers' Decoration
Signature
Military service
AllegianceProvince of Canada
Dominion of Canada
Branch/serviceCanadian militia (1861-1872)
Years of service1861–1872
RankLieutenant-Colonel
UnitBelleville Volunteer Militia Rifle Company
The Argyll Light Infantry
49th Hastings Battalion
Battles/warsFenian Raids

Bowell was born in Rickinghall, Suffolk, England. He and his family moved to Belleville, Ontario, in 1832. When in his early teens, Bowell was apprenticed to the printing shop of the local newspaper, the Belleville Intelligencer, and some 15 years later, became its owner and proprietor.

In 1867, following Confederation, he was elected to the House of Commons for the Conservative Party. Bowell entered cabinet in 1878, and would serve under three prime ministers: John A. Macdonald, John Abbott, and John Thompson. He served variously as Minister of Customs (1878–1892), Minister of Militia and Defence (1892), and Minister of Trade and Commerce (1892–1894). Bowell kept his Commons seat continuously for 25 years, through a period of Liberal Party rule in the 1870s. In 1892, Bowell was appointed to the Senate. He became Leader of the Government in the Senate the following year.

In December 1894, Prime Minister Thompson unexpectedly died in office. The Earl of Aberdeen, Canada's governor general, appointed Bowell to replace Thompson as prime minister, due to his status as the most senior cabinet member. The main problem of Bowell's tenure as prime minister was the Manitoba Schools Question. His attempts at compromise alienated members of his own party, and following a Cabinet revolt in early 1896 he was forced to resign in favour of Charles Tupper. Bowell stayed on as a senator until his death at the age of 93, but never again held ministerial office; he served continuously as a Canadian parliamentarian for 50 years.

Early life, career, and family

 
Bowell in 1874

Bowell was born in Rickinghall, England, to John Bowell and Elizabeth Marshall. In 1832 his family emigrated to Belleville, Upper Canada, where he apprenticed with the printer at the town newspaper, The Belleville Intelligencer. He became a successful printer and editor with that newspaper, and later its owner. He was a Freemason[1] and an Orangeman, serving as grandmaster of the Orange Order of British North America, 1870–1878. In 1847 he married Harriet Moore, with whom he had five sons and four daughters.

Military service

 
Mackenzie Bowell, Ensign in the Belleville Rifles

A keen supporter of the militia in Hastings County, he was appointed an Ensign in the 1st Belleville Militia on July 24, 1856. He helped organize the Belleville Volunteer Militia Rifle Company in 1857 with whom he served on active duty at Amherstburg, Upper Canada, during the Trent Affair. He joined the 15th Belleville Battalion (The Argyll Light Infantry) in 1863, being promoted to captain and fought in the Fenian Raids of 1866, serving at Prescott and being awarded the Canada General Service Medal. He was promoted to Major in the 49th (Hastings) Battalion of Rifles on February 22, 1867, and qualified for the First Class Certificate at the Military School of Instruction on March 1. He was promoted to Brevet Lieutenant-Colonel on February 22, 1872, and retired from the militia on March 24, 1874, with the rank of lieutenant-colonel in that regiment.[2]

 

Elected to Parliament

Bowell was first elected to the House of Commons in 1867 as a Conservative for the riding of Hastings North, Ontario. He held his seat for the Conservatives when they lost the election of January 1874, in the wake of the Pacific Scandal. Later that year he was instrumental in having Louis Riel expelled from the House.

Appointed to Cabinet, Senator

In 1878, with the Conservatives again governing, he joined the Cabinet as minister of customs. In 1892 he became minister of militia and defence, having held his Commons seat continuously for 25 years. A competent, hardworking administrator, Bowell remained in Cabinet as minister of trade and commerce, a newly created portfolio, after he became a senator that same year. His visit to Australia in 1893 led to the first leaders' conference of British colonies and territories, held in Ottawa in 1894. He became leader of the government in the Senate on October 31, 1893.

Prime minister (1894–1896)

In December 1894, Prime Minister John Sparrow David Thompson died suddenly, and Bowell, as the most senior Cabinet minister, was appointed in Thompson's stead by the Governor General. Bowell thus became the second of just two Canadian prime ministers (after John Abbott) to hold that office while serving in the Senate rather than the House of Commons.

Manitoba Schools Question

As Prime Minister, Bowell faced the Manitoba Schools Question. In 1890, Manitoba had abolished public funding for denominational schools, both Catholic and Protestant, which many thought was contrary to the provisions made for denominational schools in the Manitoba Act of 1870. However, in a court challenge, the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council held that Manitoba's abolition of public funding for denominational schools was consistent with the Manitoba Act provision.[3] In a second court case, the Judicial Committee held that the federal Parliament had the authority to enact remedial legislation to force Manitoba to re-establish the funding.[4]

Leadership crisis

Bowell and his predecessors struggled to solve this problem, which divided the country and even Bowell's own Cabinet. He was further hampered in his handling of the issue by his own indecisiveness on it and by his inability, as a senator, to take part in debates in the House of Commons. Bowell backed legislation, already drafted, that would have forced Manitoba to restore its Catholic schools, but then postponed it due to opposition within his Cabinet. With the ordinary business of government at a standstill, several members of Cabinet decided that Bowell was incompetent to lead. To force him to step down, seven ministers resigned and then foiled the appointment of successors. Bowell denounced them as "a nest of traitors".

Resigns as prime minister

Bowell was forced to resign. After ten days, following an intervention on Bowell's behalf by the Governor General, the government crisis was resolved and matters seemingly returned to normal when six of the ministers were reinstated, but leadership was then effectively held by Charles Tupper, who had joined Cabinet at the same time, filling the seventh place. Tupper, who had been Canadian High Commissioner to the United Kingdom, had been recalled by the plotters to replace Bowell. Bowell formally resigned in favour of Tupper at the end of the parliamentary session.

Later life, and death

 
Bowell's grave stone

Bowell stayed in the Senate, serving as his party's leader there until 1906, and afterward as a regular Senator until his death in 1917, having served continuously for more than 50 years as a federal parliamentarian.

He died of pneumonia in Belleville, seventeen days short of his 94th birthday. He was buried in the Belleville cemetery.[5][6] His funeral was attended by a full complement of the Orange Order, but not by any currently or formerly elected member of the government.[7]

Legacy

Bowell was designated a National Historic Person in 1945, on the advice of the national Historic Sites and Monuments Board.[8]

The Post Office Department honored Bowell with a commemorative stamp in 1954, part of a series on prime ministers.

In their 1998 study of the Canadian prime ministers up through Jean Chrétien, J. L. Granatstein and Norman Hillmer found that a survey of Canadian historians ranked Bowell #19 out of the 20 Prime Ministers up until then.[9]

Until 2017, Bowell remained the only Canadian prime minister without a full-length biography of his life and career. This shortfall was solved when the Belleville historian Betsy Dewar Boyce's book The Accidental Prime Minister was published by Bancroft, Ontario publisher Kirby Books. The book was published on the centennial of Bowell's death. Boyce had died in 2007, having unsuccessfully sought a publisher for her work for a decade.[10]

Supreme Court appointments

The following jurist was appointed to the Supreme Court of Canada by the Governor General during Bowell's tenure:

See also

Archives

There is a Sir Mackenzie Bowell fonds at Library and Archives Canada. It includes 6.1 m of textual records.[11]

Further reading

The Accidental Prime Minister, by Betsy Dewar Boyce, 2017, Kirby Publishing, Bancroft, Ontario, ISBN 978-1-926529-09-7.

Notes

  1. ^ A few famous freemasons at freemasonry.bcy.ca
  2. ^ WAITE, P.B. "Sir Mackenzie Bowell". Canadian Encyclopedia. Retrieved February 10, 2022.
  3. ^ City of Winnipeg v. Barrett; City of Winnipeg v. Logan, [1892] A.C. 445 (P.C.).
  4. ^ Brophy v. Attorney General of Manitoba, [1895] A.C. 202 (P.C.).
  5. ^ Waite, P. B. (1998). "BOWELL, Sir MACKENZIE". In Cook, Ramsay; Hamelin, Jean (eds.). Dictionary of Canadian Biography. Vol. XIV (1911–1920) (online ed.). University of Toronto Press. Retrieved March 2, 2014.
  6. ^ "Historic Sites and Monuments Board of Canada - Former Prime Ministers and Their Grave Sites - The Honourable Sir Mackenzie Bowell". Parks Canada. Government of Canada. December 20, 2010. Retrieved March 2, 2014.
  7. ^ The Globe and Mail, Dec. 29, 2017, "The accidental prime minister" (article), by Patrick White, p. A17
  8. ^ Sir MacKenzie Bowell National Historic Person, Directory of Federal Heritage Designations, no date
  9. ^ Hillmer, Norman & Granatstein, J. L. . Diefenbaker Web. Maclean's. Archived from the original on July 19, 2001. Retrieved March 27, 2012.
  10. ^ The Globe and Mail, Dec. 29, 2017, "The accidental prime minister" (article), by Patrick White, p. A17.
  11. ^ "Finding aid to Sir Mackenzie Bowell fonds, Library and Archives Canada" (PDF). Retrieved September 21, 2020.

External links

  • "Mackenzie Bowell". Dictionary of Canadian Biography (online ed.). University of Toronto Press. 1979–2016.
  • Mackenzie Bowell – Parliament of Canada biography
  • J. L. Granatstein and Norman Hillmer, Prime Ministers: Ranking Canada's Leaders, Toronto: HarperCollins Publishers Ltd., a Phyllis Bruce Book, 1999. pp. 42–44. ISBN 0-00-200027-X.
  • Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Bowell, Sir Mackenzie" . Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.
  • Photograph:Hon. Mackenzie Bowell, 1881 - McCord Museum

mackenzie, bowell, kcmg, december, 1823, december, 1917, canadian, newspaper, publisher, politician, served, fifth, prime, minister, canada, office, from, 1894, 1896, honourable, sirpc, kcmgbowell, 18915th, prime, minister, canadain, office, december, 1894, ap. Sir Mackenzie Bowell PC KCMG ˈ b oʊ el December 27 1823 December 10 1917 was a Canadian newspaper publisher and politician who served as the fifth prime minister of Canada in office from 1894 to 1896 The Honourable SirMackenzie BowellPC KCMGBowell in 18915th Prime Minister of CanadaIn office December 21 1894 April 27 1896MonarchVictoriaGovernor GeneralThe Earl of AberdeenPreceded byJohn ThompsonSucceeded byCharles TupperCanadian Senator from QuebecIn office December 1892 December 10 1917Appointed byJohn Sparrow David ThompsonMember of Parliamentfor Hastings NorthIn office September 20 1867 December 1892Preceded byRiding establishedSucceeded byAlexander Augustus Williamson CarscallenPersonal detailsBorn 1823 12 27 December 27 1823Rickinghall Suffolk EnglandDiedDecember 10 1917 1917 12 10 aged 93 Belleville Ontario CanadaResting placeBelleville Cemetery Belleville Ontario CanadaNationalityCanadianPolitical partyConservativeSpouseHarriet Bowell m 1847 died 1884 wbr Children9AwardsOrder of St Michael and St GeorgeCanadian General Service MedalColonial Auxiliary Forces Officers DecorationSignatureMilitary serviceAllegianceProvince of CanadaDominion of CanadaBranch serviceCanadian militia 1861 1872 Years of service1861 1872RankLieutenant ColonelUnitBelleville Volunteer Militia Rifle CompanyThe Argyll Light Infantry49th Hastings BattalionBattles warsFenian RaidsBowell was born in Rickinghall Suffolk England He and his family moved to Belleville Ontario in 1832 When in his early teens Bowell was apprenticed to the printing shop of the local newspaper the Belleville Intelligencer and some 15 years later became its owner and proprietor In 1867 following Confederation he was elected to the House of Commons for the Conservative Party Bowell entered cabinet in 1878 and would serve under three prime ministers John A Macdonald John Abbott and John Thompson He served variously as Minister of Customs 1878 1892 Minister of Militia and Defence 1892 and Minister of Trade and Commerce 1892 1894 Bowell kept his Commons seat continuously for 25 years through a period of Liberal Party rule in the 1870s In 1892 Bowell was appointed to the Senate He became Leader of the Government in the Senate the following year In December 1894 Prime Minister Thompson unexpectedly died in office The Earl of Aberdeen Canada s governor general appointed Bowell to replace Thompson as prime minister due to his status as the most senior cabinet member The main problem of Bowell s tenure as prime minister was the Manitoba Schools Question His attempts at compromise alienated members of his own party and following a Cabinet revolt in early 1896 he was forced to resign in favour of Charles Tupper Bowell stayed on as a senator until his death at the age of 93 but never again held ministerial office he served continuously as a Canadian parliamentarian for 50 years Contents 1 Early life career and family 2 Military service 3 Elected to Parliament 4 Appointed to Cabinet Senator 5 Prime minister 1894 1896 5 1 Manitoba Schools Question 5 2 Leadership crisis 5 3 Resigns as prime minister 6 Later life and death 7 Legacy 8 Supreme Court appointments 9 See also 10 Archives 11 Further reading 12 Notes 13 External linksEarly life career and family Edit Bowell in 1874 Bowell was born in Rickinghall England to John Bowell and Elizabeth Marshall In 1832 his family emigrated to Belleville Upper Canada where he apprenticed with the printer at the town newspaper The Belleville Intelligencer He became a successful printer and editor with that newspaper and later its owner He was a Freemason 1 and an Orangeman serving as grandmaster of the Orange Order of British North America 1870 1878 In 1847 he married Harriet Moore with whom he had five sons and four daughters Military service Edit Mackenzie Bowell Ensign in the Belleville Rifles A keen supporter of the militia in Hastings County he was appointed an Ensign in the 1st Belleville Militia on July 24 1856 He helped organize the Belleville Volunteer Militia Rifle Company in 1857 with whom he served on active duty at Amherstburg Upper Canada during the Trent Affair He joined the 15th Belleville Battalion The Argyll Light Infantry in 1863 being promoted to captain and fought in the Fenian Raids of 1866 serving at Prescott and being awarded the Canada General Service Medal He was promoted to Major in the 49th Hastings Battalion of Rifles on February 22 1867 and qualified for the First Class Certificate at the Military School of Instruction on March 1 He was promoted to Brevet Lieutenant Colonel on February 22 1872 and retired from the militia on March 24 1874 with the rank of lieutenant colonel in that regiment 2 Elected to Parliament EditBowell was first elected to the House of Commons in 1867 as a Conservative for the riding of Hastings North Ontario He held his seat for the Conservatives when they lost the election of January 1874 in the wake of the Pacific Scandal Later that year he was instrumental in having Louis Riel expelled from the House Appointed to Cabinet Senator EditIn 1878 with the Conservatives again governing he joined the Cabinet as minister of customs In 1892 he became minister of militia and defence having held his Commons seat continuously for 25 years A competent hardworking administrator Bowell remained in Cabinet as minister of trade and commerce a newly created portfolio after he became a senator that same year His visit to Australia in 1893 led to the first leaders conference of British colonies and territories held in Ottawa in 1894 He became leader of the government in the Senate on October 31 1893 Prime minister 1894 1896 EditIn December 1894 Prime Minister John Sparrow David Thompson died suddenly and Bowell as the most senior Cabinet minister was appointed in Thompson s stead by the Governor General Bowell thus became the second of just two Canadian prime ministers after John Abbott to hold that office while serving in the Senate rather than the House of Commons Manitoba Schools Question Edit As Prime Minister Bowell faced the Manitoba Schools Question In 1890 Manitoba had abolished public funding for denominational schools both Catholic and Protestant which many thought was contrary to the provisions made for denominational schools in the Manitoba Act of 1870 However in a court challenge the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council held that Manitoba s abolition of public funding for denominational schools was consistent with the Manitoba Act provision 3 In a second court case the Judicial Committee held that the federal Parliament had the authority to enact remedial legislation to force Manitoba to re establish the funding 4 Leadership crisis Edit Bowell and his predecessors struggled to solve this problem which divided the country and even Bowell s own Cabinet He was further hampered in his handling of the issue by his own indecisiveness on it and by his inability as a senator to take part in debates in the House of Commons Bowell backed legislation already drafted that would have forced Manitoba to restore its Catholic schools but then postponed it due to opposition within his Cabinet With the ordinary business of government at a standstill several members of Cabinet decided that Bowell was incompetent to lead To force him to step down seven ministers resigned and then foiled the appointment of successors Bowell denounced them as a nest of traitors Resigns as prime minister Edit Bowell was forced to resign After ten days following an intervention on Bowell s behalf by the Governor General the government crisis was resolved and matters seemingly returned to normal when six of the ministers were reinstated but leadership was then effectively held by Charles Tupper who had joined Cabinet at the same time filling the seventh place Tupper who had been Canadian High Commissioner to the United Kingdom had been recalled by the plotters to replace Bowell Bowell formally resigned in favour of Tupper at the end of the parliamentary session Later life and death Edit Bowell s grave stone Bowell stayed in the Senate serving as his party s leader there until 1906 and afterward as a regular Senator until his death in 1917 having served continuously for more than 50 years as a federal parliamentarian He died of pneumonia in Belleville seventeen days short of his 94th birthday He was buried in the Belleville cemetery 5 6 His funeral was attended by a full complement of the Orange Order but not by any currently or formerly elected member of the government 7 Legacy EditBowell was designated a National Historic Person in 1945 on the advice of the national Historic Sites and Monuments Board 8 The Post Office Department honored Bowell with a commemorative stamp in 1954 part of a series on prime ministers In their 1998 study of the Canadian prime ministers up through Jean Chretien J L Granatstein and Norman Hillmer found that a survey of Canadian historians ranked Bowell 19 out of the 20 Prime Ministers up until then 9 Until 2017 Bowell remained the only Canadian prime minister without a full length biography of his life and career This shortfall was solved when the Belleville historian Betsy Dewar Boyce s book The Accidental Prime Minister was published by Bancroft Ontario publisher Kirby Books The book was published on the centennial of Bowell s death Boyce had died in 2007 having unsuccessfully sought a publisher for her work for a decade 10 Supreme Court appointments EditThe following jurist was appointed to the Supreme Court of Canada by the Governor General during Bowell s tenure Desire Girouard September 28 1895 March 22 1911 See also Edit Canada portal Politics portalList of prime ministers of CanadaArchives EditThere is a Sir Mackenzie Bowell fonds at Library and Archives Canada It includes 6 1 m of textual records 11 Further reading EditThe Accidental Prime Minister by Betsy Dewar Boyce 2017 Kirby Publishing Bancroft Ontario ISBN 978 1 926529 09 7 Notes Edit A few famous freemasons at freemasonry bcy ca WAITE P B Sir Mackenzie Bowell Canadian Encyclopedia Retrieved February 10 2022 City of Winnipeg v Barrett City of Winnipeg v Logan 1892 A C 445 P C Brophy v Attorney General of Manitoba 1895 A C 202 P C Waite P B 1998 BOWELL Sir MACKENZIE In Cook Ramsay Hamelin Jean eds Dictionary of Canadian Biography Vol XIV 1911 1920 online ed University of Toronto Press Retrieved March 2 2014 Historic Sites and Monuments Board of Canada Former Prime Ministers and Their Grave Sites The Honourable Sir Mackenzie Bowell Parks Canada Government of Canada December 20 2010 Retrieved March 2 2014 The Globe and Mail Dec 29 2017 The accidental prime minister article by Patrick White p A17 Sir MacKenzie Bowell National Historic Person Directory of Federal Heritage Designations no date Hillmer Norman amp Granatstein J L Historians rank the BEST AND WORST Canadian Prime Ministers Diefenbaker Web Maclean s Archived from the original on July 19 2001 Retrieved March 27 2012 The Globe and Mail Dec 29 2017 The accidental prime minister article by Patrick White p A17 Finding aid to Sir Mackenzie Bowell fonds Library and Archives Canada PDF Retrieved September 21 2020 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Mackenzie Bowell Mackenzie Bowell Dictionary of Canadian Biography online ed University of Toronto Press 1979 2016 Mackenzie Bowell Parliament of Canada biography J L Granatstein and Norman Hillmer Prime Ministers Ranking Canada s Leaders Toronto HarperCollins Publishers Ltd a Phyllis Bruce Book 1999 pp 42 44 ISBN 0 00 200027 X Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Bowell Sir Mackenzie Encyclopaedia Britannica 11th ed Cambridge University Press Photograph Hon Mackenzie Bowell 1881 McCord Museum Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mackenzie Bowell amp oldid 1128725732, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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