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Robert Borden

Sir Robert Laird Borden GCMG PC KC (June 26, 1854 – June 10, 1937) was a Canadian lawyer and politician who served as the eighth prime minister of Canada from 1911 to 1920. He is best known for his leadership of Canada during World War I.

Sir Robert Borden
Borden in 1918
8th Prime Minister of Canada
In office
October 10, 1911 – July 10, 1920
MonarchGeorge V
Governors General
Preceded byWilfrid Laurier
Succeeded byArthur Meighen
Leader of the Conservative Party
In office
February 6, 1901 – July 10, 1920
Preceded byCharles Tupper
Succeeded byArthur Meighen
Member of Parliament
for Kings
In office
December 17, 1917 – July 1920
Preceded byArthur de Witt Foster
Succeeded byErnest William Robinson
Member of Parliament
for Carleton
In office
February 4, 1905 – January 25, 1909
Preceded byEdward Kidd
Succeeded byEdward Kidd
Member of Parliament
for Halifax
In office
October 26, 1908 – December 16, 1917
Preceded byMichael Carney
Succeeded byPeter Francis Martin
In office
June 23, 1896 – November 2, 1904
Preceded byJohn Fitzwilliam Stairs
Succeeded byMichael Carney
Personal details
Born
Robert Laird Borden

(1854-06-26)June 26, 1854
Grand-Pré, Nova Scotia
DiedJune 10, 1937(1937-06-10) (aged 82)
Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
Resting placeBeechwood Cemetery, Ottawa, Ontario
Political party
Spouse
(m. 1889)
Signature

Borden was born in Grand-Pré, Nova Scotia. He worked as a schoolteacher for a period and then served his articles of clerkship at a Halifax law firm. He was called to the bar in 1878, and soon became one of Nova Scotia's most prominent barristers. Borden was elected to the House of Commons in the 1896 federal election, representing the Conservative Party. He replaced Charles Tupper as party leader in 1901, but was defeated in two federal elections by Liberal Prime Minister Wilfrid Laurier in 1904 and 1908. However, in the 1911 federal election, Borden led the Conservatives to victory after he claimed that the Liberals' proposed trade reciprocity treaty with the United States would lead to the US influencing Canadian identity and weaken ties with Great Britain.

Borden's early years as prime minister focused on strengthening relations with Britain. Halfway through his first term, World War I broke out. To send soldiers overseas, he created the Canadian Expeditionary Force. He also became significantly interventionist by passing the War Measures Act which gave the government extraordinary powers. To increase government revenue to fund the war effort, Borden's government issued victory bonds, raised tariffs, and introduced new taxes including the income tax. In 1917, facing what he believed to be a shortage in Canadian soldiers, Borden introduced conscription, angering French Canada and sparking a national divide known as the Conscription Crisis. Despite this, his Unionist Party composed of Conservatives and pro-conscription Liberals was re-elected with an overwhelming majority in the 1917 federal election. At the Paris Peace Conference, Borden sought to expand the autonomy of Canada and other Dominions. On the home front, Borden's government dealt with the consequences of the Halifax Explosion, introduced women's suffrage for federal elections, nationalized railways by establishing the Canadian National Railway, and controversially used the North-West Mounted Police to break up the 1919 Winnipeg general strike.

Borden retired from politics in 1920. In his retirement, he was Chancellor of Queen's University from 1924 to 1930 and was president of two financial institutions, the Barclays Bank of Canada and the Crown Life Insurance Company from 1928 until his death in 1937. Borden places above-average among historians and the public in rankings of prime ministers of Canada. Borden was the last prime minister born before Confederation and the last prime minister to be knighted, having accepted a knighthood in 1914.

Early life and career (1854–1874) edit

The last Canadian prime minister born before Confederation, Borden was born and educated in Grand-Pré, Nova Scotia, a farming community at the eastern end of the Annapolis Valley. His great-grandfather, Perry Borden Sr. of Tiverton, Rhode Island, had taken up Acadian land in this region in 1760 as one of the New England Planters. The Borden family had immigrated from Headcorn, Kent, England, to New England in the 17th century. Also arriving in this group was a great-great-grandfather, Robert Denison, who had come from Connecticut at about the same time. Perry had accompanied his father, Samuel Borden, the chief surveyor chosen by the government of Massachusetts to survey the former Acadian land and draw up new lots for the Planters in Nova Scotia. Through the marriage of his patrilineal ancestor Richard Borden to Innocent Cornell, Borden is descendant from Thomas Cornell of Portsmouth, Rhode Island.[1][2]

Borden's father, Andrew Borden, was judged by his son to be "a man of good ability and excellent judgement" and of a "calm, contemplative and philosophical" turn of mind, but "he lacked energy and had no great aptitude for affairs." His mother Eunice Jane Laird was more driven, possessing "very strong character, remarkable energy, high ambition and unusual ability". Her ambition was transmitted to her first-born child, who applied himself to his studies while assisting his parents with the farm work he found so disagreeable. Borden's cousin, Frederick Borden, was a prominent Liberal politician.[2][3]

At age nine, Borden became a day student for the local private academy, Acacia Villa School. The school sought to "fit boys physically, morally, and intellectually, for the responsibilities of life." There, Borden developed an interest in the Greek, Latin, and Hebrew languages. At age 14, Borden became the assistant master for classical studies. In late 1873, Borden began working as a professor for classics and mathematics at the Glenwood Institute in Matawan, New Jersey. Seeing no future in teaching, he returned to Nova Scotia in 1874.[2]

Lawyer (1874–1896) edit

Despite having no formal university education, Borden went to serve his articles of clerkship for four years at a Halifax law firm. Borden also attended the School of Military Instruction in the city during the winter of 1878. In August 1878, Borden was called to the Nova Scotia Bar, placing first in the bar examinations. He went to Kentville, Nova Scotia, as the junior partner of the Conservative lawyer John P. Chipman. In 1880, Borden was inducted into the Freemasons St Andrew's lodge No. 1.[2][4] In 1882, Borden, despite being a Liberal, accepted Wallace Graham's request to move to Halifax and join the Conservative law firm headed by Graham and Charles Hibbert Tupper. In 1886, Borden broke with the Liberal Party after he disagreed with Premier William Stevens Fielding's campaign to withdraw Nova Scotia from Confederation. In the autumn of 1889, when he was only 35, Borden became the senior partner following the departure of Graham and Tupper for the bench and politics, respectively.[2]

His financial future guaranteed, on September 25, 1889, Borden married Laura Bond, the daughter of a Halifax hardware merchant. They had no children. Bond later became president of the Local Council of Women of Halifax, until her resignation in 1901. She also later became president of the Aberdeen Association, vice-president of the Women's Work Exchange in Halifax, and corresponding secretary of the Associated Charities of the United States.[5] The Bordens spent several weeks vacationing in England and Europe in the summers of 1891 and 1893. In 1894, Borden bought a large property and home on the south side of Quinpool Road, which the couple called Pinehurst.[2]

In 1893, Borden successfully argued the first of two cases which he took to the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council. He represented many of the important Halifax businesses and sat on the boards of Nova Scotian companies, including the Bank of Nova Scotia and the Crown Life Insurance Company. By the mid-1890s, Borden's firm was so prominent that it attracted notable clients, such as the Bank of Nova Scotia, Canada Atlantic Steamship, and the Nova Scotia Telephone Company. Borden had several court cases in Ottawa, and while in that city he frequently met with Prime Minister John Sparrow David Thompson, a fellow Nova Scotian. In 1896, Borden became president of the Nova Scotia Barristers' Society and took the initiative in organizing the founding meetings of the Canadian Bar Association in Montreal.[2]

On April 27, 1896, Borden went to Charles Tupper's home for a dinner party. Tupper, who was about to succeed Mackenzie Bowell as prime minister, asked Borden to run for the federal electoral district of Halifax for the upcoming election. Borden accepted the request.[2]

Early political career (1896–1901) edit

Campaigning in favour of his party's National Policy, Borden was elected as a member of Parliament (MP) in the 1896 federal election as a Conservative. However, the Conservative Party as a whole was defeated by the Liberals led by Wilfrid Laurier.[2]

Though an MP in Ottawa, Borden still practised law back in Halifax. He also remained loyal to Tupper. Borden participated in many House committees and over time emerged as a key figure in the party.[2]

Leader of the Official Opposition (1901–1911) edit

Tupper announced his resignation as party leader after he led the Conservatives to their second consecutive defeat at the polls in 1900. Tupper, and his son Charles Hibbert Tupper (who was Borden's former colleague at the Halifax law firm) asked Borden to become leader, citing his work in Parliament and lack of enemies within the Conservative caucus. Borden at first was not keen to become leader, stating, "I have not either the experience or the qualifications which would enable me to successfully lead the party...It would be an absurdity for the party and madness for me." However, he later changed his position and on February 6, 1901, he was selected by the Conservative caucus as party leader.[2]

 
Borden, 1901

The Liberal prime minister, Wilfrid Laurier, proposed the building of the Canadian Northern and Grand Trunk railways. Borden proposed for the railways to be government-owned and government-operated, stating the people would have a choice between "a government-owned railway or a railway-owned government." This position did not resonate with voters in the 1904 federal election; the Liberals won a slightly stronger majority, while the Conservatives lost a few seats. Borden himself was defeated in his Halifax seat but re-entered the House of Commons the next year via a by-election in Carleton (Ontario). In 1907, Borden announced the Halifax Platform. The Conservative Party's new policy called for reform of the Senate and the civil service, a more selective immigration policy, free rural mail delivery, government regulation of telegraphs, telephones, and railways and eventually national ownership of telegraphs and telephones. In the 1908 federal election, Laurier's Liberals won for the fourth consecutive time. However, the Liberals experienced a drop in support as they won a slightly reduced majority. The Conservatives experienced a modest boost, gaining 10 seats.[2]

In 1910 and 1911, Laurier proposed a reciprocity free trade agreement with the United States. Borden opposed the treaty, stating that it would weaken ties with Britain, lead to Canadian identity being influenced by the US, and lead to American annexation of Canada. In the 1911 federal election, the Conservatives countered with a revised version of John A. Macdonald's National Policy, campaigned on fears of American influence on Canada and disloyalty to Britain, and ran on the slogan "Canadianism or Continentalism". The Conservatives triumphed; they won a strong majority, ending over 15 years of Liberal rule.[2][6][7]

Prime Minister (1911–1920) edit

Pre-war Canada edit

To aid the farmers who would have benefited had the reciprocity treaty been implemented, Borden's government passed the Canada Grain Act of 1912 to establish a board of grain commissioners that would supervise grain inspection and regulate the grain trade. This law would also allow the federal government to build or acquire and operate grain elevators at key points in the grain marketing and export system.[2]

 
Sir Robert and Lady Borden, 1912

Also in 1912, the provinces of Manitoba, Ontario, and Quebec were expanded through the Manitoba Boundaries Extension Act, the Ontario Boundaries Extension Act, and the Quebec Boundaries Extension Act. These three provinces would take up the southern portion of the Northwest Territories.[8][9][10]

In 1912 and 1913, Borden's government sought to pass a naval bill that would have sent $35 million for the construction of three dreadnoughts for the British Navy. Laurier, now Opposition leader, argued that the bill would threaten Canadian autonomy. In May 1913, the bill was blocked by the Liberal-controlled Senate.[2]

On June 22, 1914, Borden was knighted; King George V awarded him the Order of St Michael and St George.[2]

First World War edit

In late July, Borden and his wife, Laura, went for a vacation to the Muskoka District Municipality. However, the trip was cut short after World War I broke out in Europe. On July 31, the Bordens were on a train for Toronto. The next day, he returned to Ottawa. The British declaration of war on August 4, 1914, automatically brought Canada into the war.[2][11]

Major reforms edit

On August 22, 1914, Parliament passed the controversial War Measures Act (with support from both Conservatives and Liberals), which gave the government extraordinary and emergency powers, including the right to censor and suppress communications, the right to arrest, detain, and deport people without charges or trials, the right to control transportation, trade and manufacturing, and the right to seize private property during times of "war, invasion or insurrection". The act also allowed Borden to govern by Order in Council, meaning that Cabinet was allowed to implement pieces of legislation without the need for a vote in the House of Commons and Senate.[2][12][13]

Borden's government created the Canadian Patriotic Fund to give financial and social assistance to the families of soldiers.[14] The government also raised tariffs on some high-demand consumer items to boost the economy.[2]

In 1916, Borden's government established the National Research Council Canada for scientific and industrial research.[15] In 1918, to gain information on Canada's population, social structure, and economy, the government established the Dominion Bureau of Statistics through the Statistics Act. It was renamed Statistics Canada in 1971.[2]

Borden's government set up the Canadian Expeditionary Force (CEF). The force posted several combat formations of the Western Front during the war.[16] In December 1914, Borden stated, "there has not been, there will not be, compulsion or conscription." As the war dragged on, more troops for the CEF were deployed through the voluntary force. In July 1915, the number of CEF soldiers increased to 150,000 before being increased to 250,000 in October 1915 before doubling to 500,000 in January 1916. By mid-1916, the rate of volunteers enlisting started to slow down.[2]

Economy edit

 
Borden opening a Victory Bond campaign in Toronto, 1915

Despite the threat of an economic collapse and the need for more revenue to fund the war effort, Borden's finance minister, William Thomas White, rejected calls for direct taxation on Canadian citizens in 1914, though this position would be shortly reversed. White cited his beliefs that taxation would cost too much to implement and would interfere with provincial taxation systems.[2] Borden and White instead opted for "business as usual" with Britain by assuming that the country would cover the costs incurred by Canada. However, at the end of 1914, Britain was not able to lend money to Canada due to their own economic priorities. By 1917, Britain had become unable to pay for wartime shipments from Canada. During the war, Canada drastically increased imports of specialized metals and machinery needed for production of ammunition from the United States.[17] This led Borden and White to successfully negotiate a $50 million loan in New York City in 1915.[2][18] Canada also succeeded in negotiating larger bond issues in New York in 1916 and 1917. In 1918, a Victory Bond of $300 million brought in $660 million.[2] Overall, Victory Bond campaigns raised around $2 billion. American investment in Canada significantly increased whereas British investment declined. By 1918, imports of goods from the United States were 1,000 percent of British exports to Canada.[17]

In 1915, 1916, and 1917, Borden's government began to reverse their anti-taxation position, not least because of the need for more government revenue. The government introducing wartime savings bonds and raising import tariffs was not enough. In 1915, a luxury tax on tobacco and alcohol and taxes on transport tickets, telegrams, money orders, cheques, and patent medicines were introduced. By the end of the war, staple items were taxed. In a politically motivated move in 1916, the government introduced the Business Profits War Tax to address increasing concerns about businesses practising war profiteering. The tax expired in 1920 but was brought back in the Second World War.[2][19]

In 1917, Borden's government introduced the income tax which came into effect on September 20, 1917. The tax exempted the first $1,500 of income for single people (unmarried persons and widows and widowers without dependent children); the tax exempted the first $3,000 for everyone else. Single people were taxed at four percent while the tax rate ranged from two to 22 percent for married Canadians with dependents and an annual income over $6,000. Due to its several exemptions, only two to eight percent of Canadians filed tax returns during the early days of the income tax. When the war ended in 1918, $8 million in income tax revenue had been recorded, which was a small fraction of the national net debt of $1.6 billion. Though Borden's government declared the income tax to be temporary, it has remained in place ever since.[20][21]

In 1917, facing skyrocketing prices, Borden's government established the Board of Grain Supervisors of Canada to distance the marketing of crops grown in 1917 and 1918 away from the private grain companies. It was succeeded by the Canadian Wheat Board for the 1919 crop.[2] The board was dissolved in 1920, despite the concept being popular among farm organizations.[22]

Conscription, Unionist Party, and 1917 election edit

In Spring 1917, Borden visited Europe and attended the Imperial Conference. There, he participated in discussions that included possible peace terms and helped spearhead the passage of Resolution IX which called for a post-war constitutional conference to "provide effective arrangements for continuous consultation in all important matters of common Imperial concern, and for such necessary concerted action, founded on consultation, as the several Governments may determine."[2] He also assured leaders of the Allied countries that Canada was committed to the war. Also during his trip, Borden made visits to the hospital to meet wounded and shell shocked soldiers and became determined that the soldiers' sacrifices should not be in vain, and that therefore, the war must end. With volunteer enlistment slowing down, Borden believed that the war should finish through only one method: conscription. Reversing their pledge to not introduce the policy, Borden's government passed the Military Service Act to introduce conscription.[23] The act became law on August 29, 1917.[24]

 
Borden speaking to wounded soldiers at a hospital in the Western Front, March 1917

The disputes over conscription triggered the Conscription Crisis of 1917; most English Canadians supported the policy whereas most French Canadians opposed it, as seen by protests in Quebec. In a bid to settle Quebec opposition towards the policy, Borden proposed forming a wartime coalition government composed of both Conservatives and Liberals. Despite Borden offering the Liberals equal seats in the Cabinet in exchange for Liberal support for conscription, the proposal was rejected by Liberal leader Laurier. In October, Borden formed the Unionist Party, a coalition of Conservatives and pro-conscription Liberals (known as Liberal–Unionists). Laurier, maintaining his anti-conscription position, refused to join the Unionist government and instead created the "Laurier Liberals", a party of Liberals opposed to conscription.[25]

 
Borden addressing troops in England, April 1917

The 1917 federal election was held on December 17. The election was Canada's first in six years; it was supposed to be held in 1916 due to the constitutional requirement that Parliament last no longer than five years, but was delayed by one year due to the war.[26] Months before the election was called, Borden's government introduced the Military Voters Act that allowed all 400,000 conscripted Canadian soldiers — including those who were underage and born in Britain, to vote. The act also allowed current and former Indigenous veterans to vote. In addition, the Wartime Elections Act allowed female relatives of soldiers (excluding Indigenous women) to vote. However, this law confiscated voting rights from German and Austrian immigrants (i.e. immigrants from "enemy nations") who moved to Canada during and after 1902 as well as those who exempted from the coming conscription draft, including conscientious objectors. Some believe that these laws put the Unionists in a favourable position.[17][27]

The Unionist election campaign criticized French Canada for its low enlistment rate to fight in the war. Fearing the possible event of a Liberal victory, one of the Unionist pamphlets highlighted ethnic differences, stating, "the French Canadians who have shirked their duty in this war will be the dominating force in the government of this country. Are the English-speaking people prepared to stand for that?"[17]

The Unionist campaign was an overwhelming success; the government won a powerful majority (114 Conservatives and 39 Liberals), won the highest share of the popular vote in Canadian history, and won the largest percentage of seats in Canadian history at the time (at 65.1%). The Liberals on the other hand lost seats and won their smallest share of the popular vote since the 1882 federal election. The election revealed ethnic divides in the country; the Conservatives won over English Canadians whereas the Liberals swept French-Canadian-dominated Quebec.[2][17]

The process of conscripting soldiers began in January 1918.[24] Only 124,588 out of the 401,882 men who registered for conscription were drafted and only 24,132 actually fought in Europe. By spring 1918, the government removed certain exemptions.[28] To suppress the anti-conscription "Easter Riots" that occurred in Quebec City between March 28 and April 1, Borden's government used the War Measures Act, invoked martial law, and deployed more than 6,000 troops. The troops and rioters exchanged gunfire, resulting in four civilian deaths and as many as 150 casualties.[28]

Ukrainian Canadian internment edit

Between 1914 and 1920, more than 8,500 Ukrainian Canadians were interned under the measures of the War Measures Act. Some immigrated from the Central Powers countries of the German Empire, Austria-Hungary, and the Ottoman Empire. The internees faced intense labour; they worked in the national parks of Western Canada, built roads, cleared bush, and cut trails. They also had their personal wealth and property confiscated and never returned by the Borden government. Overall, 107 internees died. Six were shot dead while trying to escape and others died from disease, work-related injuries, and suicide.[29]

Another 80,000 Ukrainian Canadians were not imprisoned but were registered as "enemy aliens" and were compelled to report regularly to the police. Their freedom of speech, movement, and association were also restricted.[29]

Borden and the Treaty of Versailles edit

Throughout the war, Borden stressed the need for Canada to participate in British decisions;[30] in a January 1916 letter to the High Commissioner of Canada in the United Kingdom, George Perley, Borden wrote:

"It can hardly be expected that we shall put 400,000 or 500,000 men in the field and willingly accept the position of having no more voice and receiving no more consideration than if we were toy automata."[31]

On October 27, 1918, British Prime Minister David Lloyd George requested Borden to visit Britain for possible peace talks. Borden replied stating, "the press and the people of this country take it for granted that Canada will be represented at the Peace Conference." World War I ended shortly after on November 11, 1918. Borden told his wife, Laura, that "Canada got nothing out of the war except recognition."[2]

Borden attended the 1919 Paris Peace Conference, though boycotted the opening ceremony, protesting at the precedence given to William Lloyd, the prime minister of the much smaller Newfoundland, over Borden. Convinced that Canada had become a nation on the battlefields of Europe, Borden demanded that it have a separate seat at the Conference. This was initially opposed not only by Britain but also by the United States, which perceived such a delegation as an extra British vote. Borden responded by pointing out that since Canada had lost a far larger proportion of its men compared to the US in the war (although not more in absolute numbers), Canada at least had the right to the representation of a "minor" power. Lloyd George eventually relented, and convinced the reluctant Americans to accept the presence of separate Canadian, Indian, Australian, Newfoundland, New Zealand and South African delegations.[2][32] Not only did Borden's persistence allow him to represent Canada in Paris as a nation, it also ensured that each of the dominions could sign the Treaty of Versailles in its own right and receive a separate membership in the League of Nations. Also during the conference, Borden tried to act as an intermediary between the United States and other members of the British Empire delegation, particularly Australia and New Zealand over the issue of the League of Nations Mandate.[33] Borden also discussed with Lloyd George the possibility of Canada taking over the West Indies but no agreement was reached.[34]

On May 6, 1919, Borden issued a memorandum calling for Canada, as a member, to have the right to be elected to the League's council. This proposal was accepted by Lloyd George, U.S. President Woodrow Wilson, and French Prime Minister Georges Clemenceau. These three leaders also included Canada's right to contest for election to the governing body of the International Labour Organization. Borden departed Paris on May 11; his Cabinet ministers Charles Doherty and Arthur Sifton signed the Treaty of Versailles on his behalf.[2]

Domestic policies and post-war Canada edit

Halifax Explosion edit

Eleven days before Canadians went to the polls in the 1917 election, Canada experienced the largest domestic disaster in its history: the Halifax Explosion that killed nearly 1,800 people. The tragedy occurring in his own hometown, Borden pledged that the government would be "co-operating in every way to reconstruct the Port of Halifax: this was of utmost importance to the Empire".[35] Borden helped set up the Halifax Relief Commission that spent $30 million on medical care, repairing infrastructure, and establishing pensions for injured survivors.[36][37]

 
Borden surveying the ruins of the Halifax Explosion

Women's suffrage edit

On May 24, 1918, female citizens 21 and over were granted the right to vote in federal elections. In 1920, Borden's government passed the Dominion Elections Act to allow women to run for the Parliament of Canada. However, these two laws prevented or discouraged Asian Canadian and Indigenous Canadian women and men from voting.[38][39]

Nickle Resolution edit

Despite being knighted himself, Borden disapproved of the process by which Canadians were nominated for honours and in March 1917 drafted a policy stating that all names had to be vetted by the prime minister before the list was sent to Westminster.[40] In mid-1917, Borden agreed with MP William Folger Nickle's proposal to abolish Hereditary titles in Canada. In addition to the abolition of the Hereditary titles, it was later learned that with the exception of military distinctions, honours would not be granted to residents of Canada without the approval or the advice of the Canadian prime minister.[2]

Nationalization of railways edit

On June 6, 1919, through an Order in Council,[41] Borden's government established the Canadian National Railways (CN) as a Crown Corporation. The organization originally consisted of four railways: the Intercolonial Railway, the Canadian Northern Railway, the National Transcontinental Railway, and the Grand Trunk Pacific Railway. In January 1923, a fifth one was added: the Grand Trunk Railway. All five of these railways were financially struggling as a result of their inability to borrow from banks (mainly British) during the First World War.[2][42]

1919 Winnipeg general strike edit

After the war, the working class experienced economic hardship. In a bid to address this problem, construction and metal trades workers in Winnipeg, Manitoba, sought better wages and better working conditions by negotiating with their managers. In May 1919, as a result of talks between the workers and their managers breaking down, several strikes started; on May 15, the Winnipeg Trades and Labor Council (WTLC) called for a general strike as a result of the negotiations collapsing. Within hours of the Winnipeg general strike breaking out, nearly 30,000 workers resigned.[43]

Afraid that the strike would spark conflicts in other cities, Borden's government intervened. His Cabinet ministers Arthur Meighen and Gideon Robertson met with the anti-strike Citizens’ Committee but refused to meet with the pro-strike Central Strike Committee. Taking the advice of the Citizens' Committee, Borden's government threatened to fire federal workers unless they returned to work immediately. The government also changed the Immigration Act to allow the deportation of British-born immigrants. On June 17, the government arrested 10 leaders of the Central Strike Committee and two members of the trade union, One Big Union. On June 21, Borden's government deployed troops from the North-West Mounted Police (NWMP) to the strike scene to maintain public order.[44][45] As a result of the protestors beginning to riot,[46] the NWMP charged at the protestors, beat them with clubs, and fired bullets. Two people were killed and the violent incident became known as "Bloody Saturday". Within days, the strike ended.[2][47]

Retirement edit

With his doctors recommending that he should leave politics immediately, Borden told his cabinet on December 16, 1919, that he was going to resign. Some cabinet members begged him to stay in office and take a year-long vacation. Borden took a vacation for an unspecified amount of time and returned to Ottawa in May 1920. Borden announced his retirement to his Unionist caucus on Dominion Day, July 1, 1920. Before he retired, the caucus asked him to choose his successor as leader and prime minister. Borden favoured his Finance Minister William Thomas White. With White refusing, Borden persuaded cabinet minister Arthur Meighen to succeed him. Meighen succeeded Borden on July 10, 1920. Borden retired from politics altogether in that same month.[2]

After politics (1920–1937) edit

 
Borden speaking at the Royal Agricultural Winter Fair, 1930

As a delegate, Borden attended the 1921–1922 Washington Naval Conference.[30] Borden was the Chancellor of Queen's University from 1924 to 1930.[48] He was Vice-President of The Champlain Society between 1923 and 1925 and was the Society's first Honorary President between 1925 and 1937.[49] He also was president of the Canadian Historical Association in 1930–31.[50] In 1928 Borden became president of two financial institutions: Barclays Bank of Canada and the Crown Life Insurance Company. In 1932 he became chairman of Canada's first mutual fund, the Canadian Investment Fund. Even after he stepped down as prime minister, Borden kept in touch with Lloyd George; Borden once told him of his retirement, stating, "There is nothing that oppresses me...books, some business avocation, my wild garden, the birds and the flowers, a little golf, and a great deal of life in the open – these together make up the fullness of my days."[2]

 
Borden's grave site

Borden died on June 10, 1937, in Ottawa and is buried in the Beechwood Cemetery marked by a simple stone cross.[51] In his funeral, a thousand World War I veterans lined the procession route.[2]

Legacy edit

The Borden government's introduction of conscription, new taxes, and use of the North-West Mounted Police to break up the 1919 Winnipeg general strike are all examples of government intervention; with his emphasis on big government, he is remembered as a Red Tory.[52] The Canadian War Museum wrote, "The pressures of war drove Borden’s government to unprecedented levels of involvement in the day-to-day lives of citizens."[53]

 
Statue on Parliament Hill, Ottawa

Borden's use of conscription in the war remains controversial. While historian J. L. Granatstein wrote, "Canada's military couldn't have carried on without the controversial policy" and that "[The conscripts] played a critical role in winning the war", he also wrote that "To achieve these ends, he almost broke the nation."[54] In the 1917 federal election, in what was seen as a backlash against Borden and the Unionist Party's pro-conscription position, Quebec voted overwhelmingly in favour of the anti-conscription Laurier Liberals; the Unionists won only three seats. Historian Robert Craig Brown wrote, "The political cost [of conscription] was enormous: the Conservative Party’s support in Quebec was destroyed and would not be recovered for decades to come."[2]

Borden's opposition towards free trade and his government's reversal of a 1917 campaign promise to exempt the sons of farmers from conscription helped the agrarian Progressive Party grow in popularity, which was dissatisfied with Borden's positions on these issues.[55] The Progressive Party was founded by Thomas Crerar, who was Borden's minister of agriculture until 1919, when he resigned over his opposition towards high tariffs and his belief that the government's budget did not pay enough attention to farmer's issues.[56][57] In the 1921 federal election that saw the Conservatives plummet to third place, the Progressives became the second-largest party and swept Western Canada, a region that Borden's Unionists won over in the election four years previously. As historian Robert Craig Brown notes, "Moreover, Unionist support in western Canada was ephemeral and vanished at the first hints of peace."[2]

In their book Prime Ministers: Ranking Canada's Leaders, J. L. Granatstein and Norman Hillmer include the results of a survey of Canadian historians regarding all the Prime Ministers through Jean Chrétien. Borden was ranked 7th.

Honours edit

Supreme Court appointments edit

Borden chose the following jurists to sit as justices of the Supreme Court of Canada:

Electoral record edit

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Notable Kin - New England in Hollywood, Part Three: The Possible Rhode Island Ancestry of Marilyn Monroe July 2, 2019, at the Wayback Machine New England Historical Genealogical Society.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am Brown, Robert. "Robert Borden". Dictionary of Canadian Biography. Retrieved January 19, 2022.
  3. ^ Borden, Robert (January 15, 1969). Robert Laird Borden: His Memoirs, Volume 1. McGill-Queen's Press - MQUP. p. 3. ISBN 9780773560550. Retrieved January 27, 2022.
  4. ^ Sir Robert Laird Borden at www.freemasonry.bcy.ca
  5. ^ Morgan, Henry James, ed. (1903). Types of Canadian Women and of Women who are or have been Connected with Canada. Toronto: Williams Briggs. p. 33.
  6. ^ Bélanger, Réal. "Wilfrid Laurier". Dictionary of Canadian Biography. Retrieved January 31, 2022.
  7. ^ "Wilfrid Laurier". The Canadian Encyclopedia. Retrieved January 31, 2022.
  8. ^ Mochoruk, Jim. "Manitoba History: Manitoba Expands Northward: A Special Edition of Manitoba History". Manitoba Historical Society. Retrieved February 1, 2022.
  9. ^ "Ontario Boundaries Extension Act (Can., 1912)". York University. Retrieved February 1, 2022.
  10. ^ "An Act to amend The Manitoba Boundaries Extension Act, 1912, and The Ontario Boundaries Extension Act (Can., 1950)". York University. Retrieved February 1, 2022.
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Bibliography edit

By Sir Robert

  • Borden, Robert (1971) Letters to Limbo. Toronto; Buffalo, N.Y.: University of Toronto Press ISBN 0-8020-1839-4
  • 1938: Borden, Robert (1938). Robert Laird Borden: his memoirs; edited and with an introduction by Henry Borden. 2 vols. (xxii, 1061 p) London: Macmillan
  • Canadian Constitutional Studies by Robert Borden at archive.org
  • Comments on the Senate's rejection of the Naval Aid Bill by Robert Borden at archive.org

Further reading edit

  • Brown, Robert Craig (1975) Robert Laird Borden: a biography. 2 vols. v. 1. 1854–1914. v. 2. 1914–1937. Toronto: Macmillan of Canada, c1975-c1980. ISBN 0-7705-1317-4 (v. 1) ISBN 0-7705-1854-0 (v. 2) (the major scholarly biography); vol 1 online; also vol 2 online
  • Brown, Robert Craig, & Cook, Ramsay (1974). Canada: 1896–1921.
  • Cook, George L. "Sir Robert Borden, Lloyd George and British Military Policy, 1917-1918." The Historical Journal 14.2 (1971): 371–395. online
  • Cook, Tim. Warlords: Borden, Mackenzie King and Canada's World Wars (2012) 472pp online
  • Cook, Tim. "Canada's Warlord: Prime Minister Sir Robert Borden's Leadership during the Great War." Journal of Military and Strategic Studies 13.3 (2011) pp 1–24. online
  • Granatstein, J. L. & Hillmer, Norman (1999). Prime Ministers: Ranking Canada's Leaders. HarperCollins ISBN 0-00-200027-X; pp. 61–74.
  • Levine, Allan. "Scrum Wars, The Prime Ministers and the Media." Dundurn, c1993. 69–101
  • MacMillan, Margaret (2003). Peacemakers: Six Months that Changed the World. London: John Murray (on the Paris Peace Conference of 1919)
  • Macquarrie, Heath. "Robert Borden and the Election of 1911." Canadian Journal of Economics and Political Science, 1959, Vol. 25 Issue 3, pp. 271–286 in JSTOR
  • Thornton, Martin. Churchill, Borden and Anglo-Canadian Naval Relations, 1911-14 (Springer, 2013).

External links edit

  • Robert Borden – Parliament of Canada biography
  • Sir Robert Borden fonds at Library and Archives Canada
  • Works by Robert Borden at Faded Page (Canada)
  • Comments on the Senate's rejection of the Naval Aid Bill
  • Historic plaque at Grand-Pré
  • Photograph:Robert L. Borden, 1905 - McCord Museum
  • Robert Borden – Parliament of Canada biography
  • Newspaper clippings about Robert Borden in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW

robert, borden, this, article, about, prime, minister, canada, american, writer, producer, producer, robert, laird, borden, gcmg, june, 1854, june, 1937, canadian, lawyer, politician, served, eighth, prime, minister, canada, from, 1911, 1920, best, known, lead. This article is about the prime minister of Canada For the American TV writer and producer see Robert Borden TV producer Sir Robert Laird Borden GCMG PC KC June 26 1854 June 10 1937 was a Canadian lawyer and politician who served as the eighth prime minister of Canada from 1911 to 1920 He is best known for his leadership of Canada during World War I The Right HonourableSir Robert BordenGCMG PC KCBorden in 19188th Prime Minister of CanadaIn office October 10 1911 July 10 1920MonarchGeorge VGovernors GeneralThe Earl Grey The Duke of Connaught The Duke of DevonshirePreceded byWilfrid LaurierSucceeded byArthur MeighenLeader of the Conservative PartyIn office February 6 1901 July 10 1920Preceded byCharles TupperSucceeded byArthur MeighenMember of Parliamentfor KingsIn office December 17 1917 July 1920Preceded byArthur de Witt FosterSucceeded byErnest William RobinsonMember of Parliamentfor CarletonIn office February 4 1905 January 25 1909Preceded byEdward KiddSucceeded byEdward KiddMember of Parliamentfor HalifaxIn office October 26 1908 December 16 1917Preceded byMichael CarneySucceeded byPeter Francis MartinIn office June 23 1896 November 2 1904Preceded byJohn Fitzwilliam StairsSucceeded byMichael CarneyPersonal detailsBornRobert Laird Borden 1854 06 26 June 26 1854Grand Pre Nova ScotiaDiedJune 10 1937 1937 06 10 aged 82 Ottawa Ontario CanadaResting placeBeechwood Cemetery Ottawa OntarioPolitical partyLiberal until 1886 Conservative after 1886 until 1917 1922 1937 Unionist 1917 1922 SpouseLaura Bond m 1889 wbr SignatureRobert Borden s voice source source source Robert Borden being interviewed on July 23rd 1936 less than a year before his death Borden was born in Grand Pre Nova Scotia He worked as a schoolteacher for a period and then served his articles of clerkship at a Halifax law firm He was called to the bar in 1878 and soon became one of Nova Scotia s most prominent barristers Borden was elected to the House of Commons in the 1896 federal election representing the Conservative Party He replaced Charles Tupper as party leader in 1901 but was defeated in two federal elections by Liberal Prime Minister Wilfrid Laurier in 1904 and 1908 However in the 1911 federal election Borden led the Conservatives to victory after he claimed that the Liberals proposed trade reciprocity treaty with the United States would lead to the US influencing Canadian identity and weaken ties with Great Britain Borden s early years as prime minister focused on strengthening relations with Britain Halfway through his first term World War I broke out To send soldiers overseas he created the Canadian Expeditionary Force He also became significantly interventionist by passing the War Measures Act which gave the government extraordinary powers To increase government revenue to fund the war effort Borden s government issued victory bonds raised tariffs and introduced new taxes including the income tax In 1917 facing what he believed to be a shortage in Canadian soldiers Borden introduced conscription angering French Canada and sparking a national divide known as the Conscription Crisis Despite this his Unionist Party composed of Conservatives and pro conscription Liberals was re elected with an overwhelming majority in the 1917 federal election At the Paris Peace Conference Borden sought to expand the autonomy of Canada and other Dominions On the home front Borden s government dealt with the consequences of the Halifax Explosion introduced women s suffrage for federal elections nationalized railways by establishing the Canadian National Railway and controversially used the North West Mounted Police to break up the 1919 Winnipeg general strike Borden retired from politics in 1920 In his retirement he was Chancellor of Queen s University from 1924 to 1930 and was president of two financial institutions the Barclays Bank of Canada and the Crown Life Insurance Company from 1928 until his death in 1937 Borden places above average among historians and the public in rankings of prime ministers of Canada Borden was the last prime minister born before Confederation and the last prime minister to be knighted having accepted a knighthood in 1914 Contents 1 Early life and career 1854 1874 2 Lawyer 1874 1896 3 Early political career 1896 1901 4 Leader of the Official Opposition 1901 1911 5 Prime Minister 1911 1920 5 1 Pre war Canada 5 2 First World War 5 2 1 Major reforms 5 2 2 Economy 5 2 3 Conscription Unionist Party and 1917 election 5 2 4 Ukrainian Canadian internment 5 3 Borden and the Treaty of Versailles 5 4 Domestic policies and post war Canada 5 4 1 Halifax Explosion 5 4 2 Women s suffrage 5 4 3 Nickle Resolution 5 4 4 Nationalization of railways 5 4 5 1919 Winnipeg general strike 5 5 Retirement 6 After politics 1920 1937 7 Legacy 8 Honours 9 Supreme Court appointments 10 Electoral record 11 See also 12 Notes 13 Bibliography 14 Further reading 15 External linksEarly life and career 1854 1874 editThe last Canadian prime minister born before Confederation Borden was born and educated in Grand Pre Nova Scotia a farming community at the eastern end of the Annapolis Valley His great grandfather Perry Borden Sr of Tiverton Rhode Island had taken up Acadian land in this region in 1760 as one of the New England Planters The Borden family had immigrated from Headcorn Kent England to New England in the 17th century Also arriving in this group was a great great grandfather Robert Denison who had come from Connecticut at about the same time Perry had accompanied his father Samuel Borden the chief surveyor chosen by the government of Massachusetts to survey the former Acadian land and draw up new lots for the Planters in Nova Scotia Through the marriage of his patrilineal ancestor Richard Borden to Innocent Cornell Borden is descendant from Thomas Cornell of Portsmouth Rhode Island 1 2 Borden s father Andrew Borden was judged by his son to be a man of good ability and excellent judgement and of a calm contemplative and philosophical turn of mind but he lacked energy and had no great aptitude for affairs His mother Eunice Jane Laird was more driven possessing very strong character remarkable energy high ambition and unusual ability Her ambition was transmitted to her first born child who applied himself to his studies while assisting his parents with the farm work he found so disagreeable Borden s cousin Frederick Borden was a prominent Liberal politician 2 3 At age nine Borden became a day student for the local private academy Acacia Villa School The school sought to fit boys physically morally and intellectually for the responsibilities of life There Borden developed an interest in the Greek Latin and Hebrew languages At age 14 Borden became the assistant master for classical studies In late 1873 Borden began working as a professor for classics and mathematics at the Glenwood Institute in Matawan New Jersey Seeing no future in teaching he returned to Nova Scotia in 1874 2 Lawyer 1874 1896 editDespite having no formal university education Borden went to serve his articles of clerkship for four years at a Halifax law firm Borden also attended the School of Military Instruction in the city during the winter of 1878 In August 1878 Borden was called to the Nova Scotia Bar placing first in the bar examinations He went to Kentville Nova Scotia as the junior partner of the Conservative lawyer John P Chipman In 1880 Borden was inducted into the Freemasons St Andrew s lodge No 1 2 4 In 1882 Borden despite being a Liberal accepted Wallace Graham s request to move to Halifax and join the Conservative law firm headed by Graham and Charles Hibbert Tupper In 1886 Borden broke with the Liberal Party after he disagreed with Premier William Stevens Fielding s campaign to withdraw Nova Scotia from Confederation In the autumn of 1889 when he was only 35 Borden became the senior partner following the departure of Graham and Tupper for the bench and politics respectively 2 His financial future guaranteed on September 25 1889 Borden married Laura Bond the daughter of a Halifax hardware merchant They had no children Bond later became president of the Local Council of Women of Halifax until her resignation in 1901 She also later became president of the Aberdeen Association vice president of the Women s Work Exchange in Halifax and corresponding secretary of the Associated Charities of the United States 5 The Bordens spent several weeks vacationing in England and Europe in the summers of 1891 and 1893 In 1894 Borden bought a large property and home on the south side of Quinpool Road which the couple called Pinehurst 2 In 1893 Borden successfully argued the first of two cases which he took to the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council He represented many of the important Halifax businesses and sat on the boards of Nova Scotian companies including the Bank of Nova Scotia and the Crown Life Insurance Company By the mid 1890s Borden s firm was so prominent that it attracted notable clients such as the Bank of Nova Scotia Canada Atlantic Steamship and the Nova Scotia Telephone Company Borden had several court cases in Ottawa and while in that city he frequently met with Prime Minister John Sparrow David Thompson a fellow Nova Scotian In 1896 Borden became president of the Nova Scotia Barristers Society and took the initiative in organizing the founding meetings of the Canadian Bar Association in Montreal 2 On April 27 1896 Borden went to Charles Tupper s home for a dinner party Tupper who was about to succeed Mackenzie Bowell as prime minister asked Borden to run for the federal electoral district of Halifax for the upcoming election Borden accepted the request 2 Early political career 1896 1901 editCampaigning in favour of his party s National Policy Borden was elected as a member of Parliament MP in the 1896 federal election as a Conservative However the Conservative Party as a whole was defeated by the Liberals led by Wilfrid Laurier 2 Though an MP in Ottawa Borden still practised law back in Halifax He also remained loyal to Tupper Borden participated in many House committees and over time emerged as a key figure in the party 2 Leader of the Official Opposition 1901 1911 editTupper announced his resignation as party leader after he led the Conservatives to their second consecutive defeat at the polls in 1900 Tupper and his son Charles Hibbert Tupper who was Borden s former colleague at the Halifax law firm asked Borden to become leader citing his work in Parliament and lack of enemies within the Conservative caucus Borden at first was not keen to become leader stating I have not either the experience or the qualifications which would enable me to successfully lead the party It would be an absurdity for the party and madness for me However he later changed his position and on February 6 1901 he was selected by the Conservative caucus as party leader 2 nbsp Borden 1901 The Liberal prime minister Wilfrid Laurier proposed the building of the Canadian Northern and Grand Trunk railways Borden proposed for the railways to be government owned and government operated stating the people would have a choice between a government owned railway or a railway owned government This position did not resonate with voters in the 1904 federal election the Liberals won a slightly stronger majority while the Conservatives lost a few seats Borden himself was defeated in his Halifax seat but re entered the House of Commons the next year via a by election in Carleton Ontario In 1907 Borden announced the Halifax Platform The Conservative Party s new policy called for reform of the Senate and the civil service a more selective immigration policy free rural mail delivery government regulation of telegraphs telephones and railways and eventually national ownership of telegraphs and telephones In the 1908 federal election Laurier s Liberals won for the fourth consecutive time However the Liberals experienced a drop in support as they won a slightly reduced majority The Conservatives experienced a modest boost gaining 10 seats 2 In 1910 and 1911 Laurier proposed a reciprocity free trade agreement with the United States Borden opposed the treaty stating that it would weaken ties with Britain lead to Canadian identity being influenced by the US and lead to American annexation of Canada In the 1911 federal election the Conservatives countered with a revised version of John A Macdonald s National Policy campaigned on fears of American influence on Canada and disloyalty to Britain and ran on the slogan Canadianism or Continentalism The Conservatives triumphed they won a strong majority ending over 15 years of Liberal rule 2 6 7 Prime Minister 1911 1920 editPre war Canada edit To aid the farmers who would have benefited had the reciprocity treaty been implemented Borden s government passed the Canada Grain Act of 1912 to establish a board of grain commissioners that would supervise grain inspection and regulate the grain trade This law would also allow the federal government to build or acquire and operate grain elevators at key points in the grain marketing and export system 2 nbsp Sir Robert and Lady Borden 1912 Also in 1912 the provinces of Manitoba Ontario and Quebec were expanded through the Manitoba Boundaries Extension Act the Ontario Boundaries Extension Act and the Quebec Boundaries Extension Act These three provinces would take up the southern portion of the Northwest Territories 8 9 10 In 1912 and 1913 Borden s government sought to pass a naval bill that would have sent 35 million for the construction of three dreadnoughts for the British Navy Laurier now Opposition leader argued that the bill would threaten Canadian autonomy In May 1913 the bill was blocked by the Liberal controlled Senate 2 On June 22 1914 Borden was knighted King George V awarded him the Order of St Michael and St George 2 First World War edit In late July Borden and his wife Laura went for a vacation to the Muskoka District Municipality However the trip was cut short after World War I broke out in Europe On July 31 the Bordens were on a train for Toronto The next day he returned to Ottawa The British declaration of war on August 4 1914 automatically brought Canada into the war 2 11 Major reforms edit On August 22 1914 Parliament passed the controversial War Measures Act with support from both Conservatives and Liberals which gave the government extraordinary and emergency powers including the right to censor and suppress communications the right to arrest detain and deport people without charges or trials the right to control transportation trade and manufacturing and the right to seize private property during times of war invasion or insurrection The act also allowed Borden to govern by Order in Council meaning that Cabinet was allowed to implement pieces of legislation without the need for a vote in the House of Commons and Senate 2 12 13 Borden s government created the Canadian Patriotic Fund to give financial and social assistance to the families of soldiers 14 The government also raised tariffs on some high demand consumer items to boost the economy 2 In 1916 Borden s government established the National Research Council Canada for scientific and industrial research 15 In 1918 to gain information on Canada s population social structure and economy the government established the Dominion Bureau of Statistics through the Statistics Act It was renamed Statistics Canada in 1971 2 Borden s government set up the Canadian Expeditionary Force CEF The force posted several combat formations of the Western Front during the war 16 In December 1914 Borden stated there has not been there will not be compulsion or conscription As the war dragged on more troops for the CEF were deployed through the voluntary force In July 1915 the number of CEF soldiers increased to 150 000 before being increased to 250 000 in October 1915 before doubling to 500 000 in January 1916 By mid 1916 the rate of volunteers enlisting started to slow down 2 Economy edit nbsp Borden opening a Victory Bond campaign in Toronto 1915 Despite the threat of an economic collapse and the need for more revenue to fund the war effort Borden s finance minister William Thomas White rejected calls for direct taxation on Canadian citizens in 1914 though this position would be shortly reversed White cited his beliefs that taxation would cost too much to implement and would interfere with provincial taxation systems 2 Borden and White instead opted for business as usual with Britain by assuming that the country would cover the costs incurred by Canada However at the end of 1914 Britain was not able to lend money to Canada due to their own economic priorities By 1917 Britain had become unable to pay for wartime shipments from Canada During the war Canada drastically increased imports of specialized metals and machinery needed for production of ammunition from the United States 17 This led Borden and White to successfully negotiate a 50 million loan in New York City in 1915 2 18 Canada also succeeded in negotiating larger bond issues in New York in 1916 and 1917 In 1918 a Victory Bond of 300 million brought in 660 million 2 Overall Victory Bond campaigns raised around 2 billion American investment in Canada significantly increased whereas British investment declined By 1918 imports of goods from the United States were 1 000 percent of British exports to Canada 17 In 1915 1916 and 1917 Borden s government began to reverse their anti taxation position not least because of the need for more government revenue The government introducing wartime savings bonds and raising import tariffs was not enough In 1915 a luxury tax on tobacco and alcohol and taxes on transport tickets telegrams money orders cheques and patent medicines were introduced By the end of the war staple items were taxed In a politically motivated move in 1916 the government introduced the Business Profits War Tax to address increasing concerns about businesses practising war profiteering The tax expired in 1920 but was brought back in the Second World War 2 19 In 1917 Borden s government introduced the income tax which came into effect on September 20 1917 The tax exempted the first 1 500 of income for single people unmarried persons and widows and widowers without dependent children the tax exempted the first 3 000 for everyone else Single people were taxed at four percent while the tax rate ranged from two to 22 percent for married Canadians with dependents and an annual income over 6 000 Due to its several exemptions only two to eight percent of Canadians filed tax returns during the early days of the income tax When the war ended in 1918 8 million in income tax revenue had been recorded which was a small fraction of the national net debt of 1 6 billion Though Borden s government declared the income tax to be temporary it has remained in place ever since 20 21 In 1917 facing skyrocketing prices Borden s government established the Board of Grain Supervisors of Canada to distance the marketing of crops grown in 1917 and 1918 away from the private grain companies It was succeeded by the Canadian Wheat Board for the 1919 crop 2 The board was dissolved in 1920 despite the concept being popular among farm organizations 22 Conscription Unionist Party and 1917 election edit See also Conscription Crisis of 1917 In Spring 1917 Borden visited Europe and attended the Imperial Conference There he participated in discussions that included possible peace terms and helped spearhead the passage of Resolution IX which called for a post war constitutional conference to provide effective arrangements for continuous consultation in all important matters of common Imperial concern and for such necessary concerted action founded on consultation as the several Governments may determine 2 He also assured leaders of the Allied countries that Canada was committed to the war Also during his trip Borden made visits to the hospital to meet wounded and shell shocked soldiers and became determined that the soldiers sacrifices should not be in vain and that therefore the war must end With volunteer enlistment slowing down Borden believed that the war should finish through only one method conscription Reversing their pledge to not introduce the policy Borden s government passed the Military Service Act to introduce conscription 23 The act became law on August 29 1917 24 nbsp Borden speaking to wounded soldiers at a hospital in the Western Front March 1917 The disputes over conscription triggered the Conscription Crisis of 1917 most English Canadians supported the policy whereas most French Canadians opposed it as seen by protests in Quebec In a bid to settle Quebec opposition towards the policy Borden proposed forming a wartime coalition government composed of both Conservatives and Liberals Despite Borden offering the Liberals equal seats in the Cabinet in exchange for Liberal support for conscription the proposal was rejected by Liberal leader Laurier In October Borden formed the Unionist Party a coalition of Conservatives and pro conscription Liberals known as Liberal Unionists Laurier maintaining his anti conscription position refused to join the Unionist government and instead created the Laurier Liberals a party of Liberals opposed to conscription 25 nbsp Borden addressing troops in England April 1917 The 1917 federal election was held on December 17 The election was Canada s first in six years it was supposed to be held in 1916 due to the constitutional requirement that Parliament last no longer than five years but was delayed by one year due to the war 26 Months before the election was called Borden s government introduced the Military Voters Act that allowed all 400 000 conscripted Canadian soldiers including those who were underage and born in Britain to vote The act also allowed current and former Indigenous veterans to vote In addition the Wartime Elections Act allowed female relatives of soldiers excluding Indigenous women to vote However this law confiscated voting rights from German and Austrian immigrants i e immigrants from enemy nations who moved to Canada during and after 1902 as well as those who exempted from the coming conscription draft including conscientious objectors Some believe that these laws put the Unionists in a favourable position 17 27 The Unionist election campaign criticized French Canada for its low enlistment rate to fight in the war Fearing the possible event of a Liberal victory one of the Unionist pamphlets highlighted ethnic differences stating the French Canadians who have shirked their duty in this war will be the dominating force in the government of this country Are the English speaking people prepared to stand for that 17 The Unionist campaign was an overwhelming success the government won a powerful majority 114 Conservatives and 39 Liberals won the highest share of the popular vote in Canadian history and won the largest percentage of seats in Canadian history at the time at 65 1 The Liberals on the other hand lost seats and won their smallest share of the popular vote since the 1882 federal election The election revealed ethnic divides in the country the Conservatives won over English Canadians whereas the Liberals swept French Canadian dominated Quebec 2 17 The process of conscripting soldiers began in January 1918 24 Only 124 588 out of the 401 882 men who registered for conscription were drafted and only 24 132 actually fought in Europe By spring 1918 the government removed certain exemptions 28 To suppress the anti conscription Easter Riots that occurred in Quebec City between March 28 and April 1 Borden s government used the War Measures Act invoked martial law and deployed more than 6 000 troops The troops and rioters exchanged gunfire resulting in four civilian deaths and as many as 150 casualties 28 Ukrainian Canadian internment edit Main article Ukrainian Canadian internment Between 1914 and 1920 more than 8 500 Ukrainian Canadians were interned under the measures of the War Measures Act Some immigrated from the Central Powers countries of the German Empire Austria Hungary and the Ottoman Empire The internees faced intense labour they worked in the national parks of Western Canada built roads cleared bush and cut trails They also had their personal wealth and property confiscated and never returned by the Borden government Overall 107 internees died Six were shot dead while trying to escape and others died from disease work related injuries and suicide 29 Another 80 000 Ukrainian Canadians were not imprisoned but were registered as enemy aliens and were compelled to report regularly to the police Their freedom of speech movement and association were also restricted 29 Borden and the Treaty of Versailles edit Throughout the war Borden stressed the need for Canada to participate in British decisions 30 in a January 1916 letter to the High Commissioner of Canada in the United Kingdom George Perley Borden wrote It can hardly be expected that we shall put 400 000 or 500 000 men in the field and willingly accept the position of having no more voice and receiving no more consideration than if we were toy automata 31 On October 27 1918 British Prime Minister David Lloyd George requested Borden to visit Britain for possible peace talks Borden replied stating the press and the people of this country take it for granted that Canada will be represented at the Peace Conference World War I ended shortly after on November 11 1918 Borden told his wife Laura that Canada got nothing out of the war except recognition 2 Borden attended the 1919 Paris Peace Conference though boycotted the opening ceremony protesting at the precedence given to William Lloyd the prime minister of the much smaller Newfoundland over Borden Convinced that Canada had become a nation on the battlefields of Europe Borden demanded that it have a separate seat at the Conference This was initially opposed not only by Britain but also by the United States which perceived such a delegation as an extra British vote Borden responded by pointing out that since Canada had lost a far larger proportion of its men compared to the US in the war although not more in absolute numbers Canada at least had the right to the representation of a minor power Lloyd George eventually relented and convinced the reluctant Americans to accept the presence of separate Canadian Indian Australian Newfoundland New Zealand and South African delegations 2 32 Not only did Borden s persistence allow him to represent Canada in Paris as a nation it also ensured that each of the dominions could sign the Treaty of Versailles in its own right and receive a separate membership in the League of Nations Also during the conference Borden tried to act as an intermediary between the United States and other members of the British Empire delegation particularly Australia and New Zealand over the issue of the League of Nations Mandate 33 Borden also discussed with Lloyd George the possibility of Canada taking over the West Indies but no agreement was reached 34 On May 6 1919 Borden issued a memorandum calling for Canada as a member to have the right to be elected to the League s council This proposal was accepted by Lloyd George U S President Woodrow Wilson and French Prime Minister Georges Clemenceau These three leaders also included Canada s right to contest for election to the governing body of the International Labour Organization Borden departed Paris on May 11 his Cabinet ministers Charles Doherty and Arthur Sifton signed the Treaty of Versailles on his behalf 2 Domestic policies and post war Canada edit Halifax Explosion edit Main article Halifax Explosion Eleven days before Canadians went to the polls in the 1917 election Canada experienced the largest domestic disaster in its history the Halifax Explosion that killed nearly 1 800 people The tragedy occurring in his own hometown Borden pledged that the government would be co operating in every way to reconstruct the Port of Halifax this was of utmost importance to the Empire 35 Borden helped set up the Halifax Relief Commission that spent 30 million on medical care repairing infrastructure and establishing pensions for injured survivors 36 37 nbsp Borden surveying the ruins of the Halifax Explosion Women s suffrage edit On May 24 1918 female citizens 21 and over were granted the right to vote in federal elections In 1920 Borden s government passed the Dominion Elections Act to allow women to run for the Parliament of Canada However these two laws prevented or discouraged Asian Canadian and Indigenous Canadian women and men from voting 38 39 Nickle Resolution edit Further information Canadian titles debate Despite being knighted himself Borden disapproved of the process by which Canadians were nominated for honours and in March 1917 drafted a policy stating that all names had to be vetted by the prime minister before the list was sent to Westminster 40 In mid 1917 Borden agreed with MP William Folger Nickle s proposal to abolish Hereditary titles in Canada In addition to the abolition of the Hereditary titles it was later learned that with the exception of military distinctions honours would not be granted to residents of Canada without the approval or the advice of the Canadian prime minister 2 Nationalization of railways edit On June 6 1919 through an Order in Council 41 Borden s government established the Canadian National Railways CN as a Crown Corporation The organization originally consisted of four railways the Intercolonial Railway the Canadian Northern Railway the National Transcontinental Railway and the Grand Trunk Pacific Railway In January 1923 a fifth one was added the Grand Trunk Railway All five of these railways were financially struggling as a result of their inability to borrow from banks mainly British during the First World War 2 42 1919 Winnipeg general strike edit Main article Winnipeg general strike After the war the working class experienced economic hardship In a bid to address this problem construction and metal trades workers in Winnipeg Manitoba sought better wages and better working conditions by negotiating with their managers In May 1919 as a result of talks between the workers and their managers breaking down several strikes started on May 15 the Winnipeg Trades and Labor Council WTLC called for a general strike as a result of the negotiations collapsing Within hours of the Winnipeg general strike breaking out nearly 30 000 workers resigned 43 Afraid that the strike would spark conflicts in other cities Borden s government intervened His Cabinet ministers Arthur Meighen and Gideon Robertson met with the anti strike Citizens Committee but refused to meet with the pro strike Central Strike Committee Taking the advice of the Citizens Committee Borden s government threatened to fire federal workers unless they returned to work immediately The government also changed the Immigration Act to allow the deportation of British born immigrants On June 17 the government arrested 10 leaders of the Central Strike Committee and two members of the trade union One Big Union On June 21 Borden s government deployed troops from the North West Mounted Police NWMP to the strike scene to maintain public order 44 45 As a result of the protestors beginning to riot 46 the NWMP charged at the protestors beat them with clubs and fired bullets Two people were killed and the violent incident became known as Bloody Saturday Within days the strike ended 2 47 Retirement edit With his doctors recommending that he should leave politics immediately Borden told his cabinet on December 16 1919 that he was going to resign Some cabinet members begged him to stay in office and take a year long vacation Borden took a vacation for an unspecified amount of time and returned to Ottawa in May 1920 Borden announced his retirement to his Unionist caucus on Dominion Day July 1 1920 Before he retired the caucus asked him to choose his successor as leader and prime minister Borden favoured his Finance Minister William Thomas White With White refusing Borden persuaded cabinet minister Arthur Meighen to succeed him Meighen succeeded Borden on July 10 1920 Borden retired from politics altogether in that same month 2 After politics 1920 1937 edit nbsp Borden speaking at the Royal Agricultural Winter Fair 1930 As a delegate Borden attended the 1921 1922 Washington Naval Conference 30 Borden was the Chancellor of Queen s University from 1924 to 1930 48 He was Vice President of The Champlain Society between 1923 and 1925 and was the Society s first Honorary President between 1925 and 1937 49 He also was president of the Canadian Historical Association in 1930 31 50 In 1928 Borden became president of two financial institutions Barclays Bank of Canada and the Crown Life Insurance Company In 1932 he became chairman of Canada s first mutual fund the Canadian Investment Fund Even after he stepped down as prime minister Borden kept in touch with Lloyd George Borden once told him of his retirement stating There is nothing that oppresses me books some business avocation my wild garden the birds and the flowers a little golf and a great deal of life in the open these together make up the fullness of my days 2 nbsp Borden s grave site Borden died on June 10 1937 in Ottawa and is buried in the Beechwood Cemetery marked by a simple stone cross 51 In his funeral a thousand World War I veterans lined the procession route 2 Legacy editThe Borden government s introduction of conscription new taxes and use of the North West Mounted Police to break up the 1919 Winnipeg general strike are all examples of government intervention with his emphasis on big government he is remembered as a Red Tory 52 The Canadian War Museum wrote The pressures of war drove Borden s government to unprecedented levels of involvement in the day to day lives of citizens 53 nbsp Statue on Parliament Hill Ottawa Borden s use of conscription in the war remains controversial While historian J L Granatstein wrote Canada s military couldn t have carried on without the controversial policy and that The conscripts played a critical role in winning the war he also wrote that To achieve these ends he almost broke the nation 54 In the 1917 federal election in what was seen as a backlash against Borden and the Unionist Party s pro conscription position Quebec voted overwhelmingly in favour of the anti conscription Laurier Liberals the Unionists won only three seats Historian Robert Craig Brown wrote The political cost of conscription was enormous the Conservative Party s support in Quebec was destroyed and would not be recovered for decades to come 2 Borden s opposition towards free trade and his government s reversal of a 1917 campaign promise to exempt the sons of farmers from conscription helped the agrarian Progressive Party grow in popularity which was dissatisfied with Borden s positions on these issues 55 The Progressive Party was founded by Thomas Crerar who was Borden s minister of agriculture until 1919 when he resigned over his opposition towards high tariffs and his belief that the government s budget did not pay enough attention to farmer s issues 56 57 In the 1921 federal election that saw the Conservatives plummet to third place the Progressives became the second largest party and swept Western Canada a region that Borden s Unionists won over in the election four years previously As historian Robert Craig Brown notes Moreover Unionist support in western Canada was ephemeral and vanished at the first hints of peace 2 In their book Prime Ministers Ranking Canada s Leaders J L Granatstein and Norman Hillmer include the results of a survey of Canadian historians regarding all the Prime Ministers through Jean Chretien Borden was ranked 7th Honours editBorden was the last Canadian Prime Minister to be knighted in 1914 since in deference to the Nickle Resolution no others have been However R B Bennett Prime Minister 1930 35 was created 1st Viscount Bennett after leaving office Borden was honoured by having two secondary schools named after him in the Nepean part of Ottawa and in the Scarborough section of Toronto Borden was also honoured by having Sir Robert Borden Junior High School named after him in Cole Harbour Nova Scotia The town of Borden Western Australia was named after him 58 Borden has appeared on the one hundred dollar bill since 1975 Supreme Court appointments editBorden chose the following jurists to sit as justices of the Supreme Court of Canada Louis Henry Davies as Chief Justice November 23 1918 May 1 1924 appointed a Puisne Justice under Prime Minister Laurier September 25 1901 Pierre Basile Mignault October 25 1918 September 30 1929 Electoral record editMain article Electoral history of Robert BordenSee also edit nbsp Canada portal nbsp Politics portal List of prime ministers of Canada Conscription Crisis of 1917 Borden Island named after BordenNotes edit Notable Kin New England in Hollywood Part Three The Possible Rhode Island Ancestry of Marilyn Monroe Archived July 2 2019 at the Wayback Machine New England Historical Genealogical Society a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am Brown Robert Robert Borden Dictionary of Canadian Biography Retrieved January 19 2022 Borden Robert January 15 1969 Robert Laird Borden His Memoirs Volume 1 McGill Queen s Press MQUP p 3 ISBN 9780773560550 Retrieved January 27 2022 Sir Robert Laird Borden at www freemasonry bcy ca Morgan Henry James ed 1903 Types of Canadian Women and of Women who are or have been Connected with Canada Toronto Williams Briggs p 33 Belanger Real Wilfrid Laurier Dictionary of Canadian Biography Retrieved January 31 2022 Wilfrid Laurier The Canadian Encyclopedia Retrieved January 31 2022 Mochoruk Jim Manitoba History Manitoba Expands Northward A Special Edition of Manitoba History Manitoba Historical Society Retrieved February 1 2022 Ontario Boundaries Extension Act Can 1912 York University Retrieved February 1 2022 An Act to amend The Manitoba Boundaries Extension Act 1912 and The Ontario Boundaries Extension Act Can 1950 York University Retrieved February 1 2022 James Ciment Thaddeus Russell 2007 The home front encyclopedia United States Britain and Canada in World Wars I and II ABC CLIO p 423 ISBN 978 1 57607 849 5 Smith Denis July 25 2013 War Measures Act Canadian Encyclopedia Retrieved February 9 2022 War Measures Act 1914 SC 1914 c 2 Department of Veterans Affairs fonds multiple media some microform Library and Archives Canada Archived from the original on October 13 2012 Retrieved February 11 2022 In addition a publicly subscribed Canadian Patriotic Fund was organized in August 1914 with responsibilities towards soldiers families Brett Alexandra Phillipson Donald February 7 2006 National Research Council of Canada Canadian Encyclopedia Retrieved February 21 2022 Military Structure the Canadian Expeditionary Force a b c d e Granatstein J L After the fighting a nation changed Maclean s Retrieved February 12 2022 Berry Paul October 2 2018 Canada Financially Comes of Age Bank of Canada Museum Retrieved February 12 2022 If some things never change when did they begin Government of Canada Retrieved February 13 2022 Bilbao Maya January 28 2022 Income Tax in Canada Canadian Encyclopedia Retrieved April 3 2023 Watson William Clemens Jason The HISTORY and DEVELOPMENT of CANADA S PERSONAL INCOME TAX PDF Fraser Institute Retrieved April 3 2023 Canadian Wheat Board The Encyclopedia of Saskatchewan Archived from the original on June 13 2021 Retrieved February 13 2022 Foot Richard August 12 2015 Election of 1917 Canadian Encyclopedia Retrieved February 14 2022 a b Preston Richard February 7 2006 Military Service Act Canadian Encyclopedia Retrieved February 14 2022 Foot Richard August 12 2015 Election of 1917 Canadian Encyclopedia Retrieved February 14 2022 British North America Act 1916 Enactment No 4 Government of Canada November 3 1999 Retrieved February 14 2022 Foot Richard August 12 2015 Election of 1917 Canadian Encyclopedia Retrieved February 14 2022 a b McIntosh Andrew Granatstein J l Jones Richard February 6 2006 Conscription in Canada Canadian Encyclopedia Retrieved February 14 2022 a b Ukrainian Internment in Canada Canadian Encyclopedia June 5 2018 Retrieved February 15 2022 a b Copp J Terry Sir Robert Borden Britannica Retrieved February 20 2022 Roberts Priscilla Tucker Spencer 2005 World War I A Student Encyclopedia Abc Clio p 2372 ISBN 9781851098798 Retrieved February 21 2022 MacMillan p 71 MacMillan p 107 114 Denton Herbert May 29 1987 CANADA HEARS SIREN CALL OF ISLANDS IN THE SUN WaPo Retrieved February 17 2022 Armstrong John Griffith 2002 The Halifax Explosion and the Royal Canadian Navy UBC Press p 99 ISBN 978 0 7748 0891 0 Bundale Brett December 1 2017 The silence after the blast How the Halifax Explosion was nearly forgotten CTV News Retrieved February 18 2022 Cahill Barry September 2018 The Halifax Relief Commission 1918 1976 Its History Historiography and Place in Halifax Disaster Scholarship Acadiensis 47 2 93 110 doi 10 1353 aca 2018 0020 S2CID 150251731 Retrieved February 18 2022 Extending the Vote CBC Retrieved February 17 2022 Strong Boag Veronica June 21 2016 Women s Suffrage in Canada Canadian Encyclopedia Retrieved February 17 2022 McCreery Christopher 2005 The Order of Canada Its Origins History and Development Toronto University of Toronto Press p 37 ISBN 0 8020 3940 5 OIC 1918 3122 Canadian National Railways Board of Directors of the Canadian Northern Railway to use this collection designation as description of the Canadian Northern and Canadian Government Railway systems without prejudice Privy Council of Canada December 20 1918 Tucker Albert March 25 2009 Canadian National Railway CN Canadian Encyclopedia Retrieved February 22 2022 Reilly J Nolan February 7 2006 Winnipeg General Strike of 1919 Canadian Encyclopedia Retrieved February 19 2022 Reilly J Nolan February 7 2006 Winnipeg General Strike of 1919 Canadian Encyclopedia Retrieved February 19 2022 Bercuson David 1990 Confrontation at Winnipeg Labour Industrial Relations and the General Strike McGill Queen s University Press pp 168 169 Bercuson David Jay 2009 1974 The Winnipeg General Strike In Abella Irving ed On Strike Six Key Labour Struggles in Canada 1919 1949 Toronto James Lorimer and Company p 26 ISBN 978 0888620576 Reilly J Nolan February 7 2006 Winnipeg General Strike of 1919 Canadian Encyclopedia Retrieved February 19 2022 Borden Sir Robert Laird Queen s Encyclopedia www queensu ca Retrieved April 19 2021 The Champlain Society Former Officers of the Champlain Society 1905 2012 Archived from the original on October 27 2014 Retrieved October 19 2014 CHA Presidents and Presidential Addresses cha shc ca Retrieved July 23 2020 Heritage Recording Services December 20 2010 The Right Honourable Sir Robert Laird Borden Former Prime Ministers and Their Grave Sites Parks Canada Archived from the original on November 2 2014 Retrieved January 1 2015 Christian William Edward and C Campbell Parties Leaders and Ideologies in Canada Sir Robert Borden Canadian War Museum Retrieved February 20 2022 Granatstein J L November 5 2018 Conscription divided Canada It also helped win the First World War Maclean s Retrieved February 20 2022 Bradburn Jamie September 23 2019 Canada s first female MP and the federal election that changed Ontario TVO Retrieved February 20 2022 Progressive Party of Canada Marianopolis College Retrieved February 20 2022 Russell Peter February 7 2006 Progressive Party Canadian Encyclopedia Retrieved February 20 2022 Albany Gateway Borden Archived from the original on October 16 2007 Retrieved June 30 2008 Bibliography editBy Sir Robert Borden Robert 1971 Letters to Limbo Toronto Buffalo N Y University of Toronto Press ISBN 0 8020 1839 4 1938 Borden Robert 1938 Robert Laird Borden his memoirs edited and with an introduction by Henry Borden 2 vols xxii 1061 p London Macmillan Canadian Constitutional Studies by Robert Borden at archive org Comments on the Senate s rejection of the Naval Aid Bill by Robert Borden at archive orgFurther reading editBrown Robert Craig 1975 Robert Laird Borden a biography 2 vols v 1 1854 1914 v 2 1914 1937 Toronto Macmillan of Canada c1975 c1980 ISBN 0 7705 1317 4 v 1 ISBN 0 7705 1854 0 v 2 the major scholarly biography vol 1 online also vol 2 online Brown Robert Craig amp Cook Ramsay 1974 Canada 1896 1921 Cook George L Sir Robert Borden Lloyd George and British Military Policy 1917 1918 The Historical Journal 14 2 1971 371 395 online Cook Tim Warlords Borden Mackenzie King and Canada s World Wars 2012 472pp online Cook Tim Canada s Warlord Prime Minister Sir Robert Borden s Leadership during the Great War Journal of Military and Strategic Studies 13 3 2011 pp 1 24 online Granatstein J L amp Hillmer Norman 1999 Prime Ministers Ranking Canada s Leaders HarperCollins ISBN 0 00 200027 X pp 61 74 Levine Allan Scrum Wars The Prime Ministers and the Media Dundurn c1993 69 101 MacMillan Margaret 2003 Peacemakers Six Months that Changed the World London John Murray on the Paris Peace Conference of 1919 Macquarrie Heath Robert Borden and the Election of 1911 Canadian Journal of Economics and Political Science 1959 Vol 25 Issue 3 pp 271 286 in JSTOR Thornton Martin Churchill Borden and Anglo Canadian Naval Relations 1911 14 Springer 2013 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Robert Laird Borden nbsp Wikisource has the text of a 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article about Robert Laird Borden Robert Borden Parliament of Canada biography Sir Robert Borden fonds at Library and Archives Canada Works by Robert Borden at Faded Page Canada Comments on the Senate s rejection of the Naval Aid Bill Historic plaque at Grand Pre Photograph Robert L Borden 1905 McCord Museum Robert Borden Parliament of Canada biography Newspaper clippings about Robert Borden in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Robert Borden amp oldid 1221777843, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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