1st Parliament of the Province of Canada
The First Parliament of the Province of Canada was summoned in 1841, following the union of Upper Canada and Lower Canada as the Province of Canada on February 10, 1841. The Parliament continued until dissolution in late 1844.
The Parliament of the Province had two chambers: the elected lower house, the Legislative Assembly, and the appointed upper house, the Legislative Council. The first general election for the Legislative Assembly was held in April, 1841. Canada East and Canada West ) each had forty-two seats in the Legislative Assembly. The members of the Legislative Council, twenty-four in number, were appointed by the British Governor General, Lord Sydenham.
All sessions were held at Kingston, Canada West, with the first session of the Parliament called on June 1841. The Parliament had three annual sessions, but then was prorogued for close to a year due to a political crisis in the relations between the Legislative Assembly and the Governor General. The Parliament was dissolved in September, 1844, triggering the second general election for the Province.
In 1841, the District Councils Act was passed which established a system of local government in Canada West based on district councils. Prior to 1841, local affairs were dealt with by the District Court of Quarter Sessions.
First government and election
The Governor General, Lord Sydenham, appointed the first members to the Executive Council on February 13, 1841. All of the members were anglophones, with no francophones. They were appointed as advisors to the Governor General, who continued to exercise the executive powers of the government.The first general election for the new Legislative Assembly was held in the spring of 1841. There was no single election date. The returning officer in each electoral district chose the date for the election in their district.
The Governor General, following the policy of assimilation set out in Lord Durham's Report, drew boundaries and chose the location of polling stations in Canada East in anglophone areas, in an effort to favour voters of British stock and to make it more difficult for francophone voters to exercise their franchise.
There was electoral violence during the elections. In one case, the threat of riots at the polling station forced Louis-Hippolyte Lafontaine, a proponent of responsible government, to withdraw his candidacy from the riding of Terrebonne in Canada East. In response, Robert Baldwin in Canada West, also a supporter of responsible government, proposed to his father, William Warren Baldwin, that they should assist Lafontaine's election. Baldwin senior was a candidate for a riding in the Toronto area. He withdrew his nomination to allow Lafontaine to stand for election. Lafontaine was elected. This was the beginning of the Lafontaine-Baldwin alliance which ultimately led to responsible government in the Province of Canada.
Candidates at this time would be loosely affiliated in early political parties, but party structure was not strong, and there were different party groups in Canada East and Canada West. The election resulted in a Legislative Assembly with no single party group with a majority.
Legislative Assembly
Canada East
Members elected in the general election
The following members were elected to the Legislative Assembly from Canada East in the 1841 general election.Riding | Member | Party |
Beauharnois | Dunscomb, John William | Tory |
Bellechasse | Ruel, Augustin-Guillaume | Anti-unionist |
Berthier | Armstrong, David Morrison | Groupe Canadien-français; later Reformer |
Bonaventure | Hamilton, John Robinson | Anti-unionist; Independent |
Chambly | Yule, John | Unionist; Tory |
Champlain | Kimber, René-Joseph | Anti-unionist; Groupe Canadien-français |
Dorchester | Taschereau, Antoine-Charles | Anti-unionist; Groupe Canadien-français |
Drummond | Watts, Robert Nugent | Unionist; Tory |
Gaspé | Christie, Robert | Anti-unionist |
Huntingdon | Cuvillier, Austin | Anti-unionist |
Kamouraska | Berthelot, Amable | Anti-unionist |
L'Islet | Taché, Étienne-Pascal | Groupe Canadien-français |
Leinster | Raymond, Jean-Moïse | Groupe Canadien-français |
Lotbinière | Noël, Jean-Baptiste-Isaïe | Groupe Canadien-français |
Megantick | Daly, Dominick | Unionist; Tory |
Missiskoui | Jones, Robert | Tory |
Montmorency | Quesnel, Frédéric-Auguste | Anti-unionist; Groupe Canadien-français |
Montreal | Holmes, Benjamin | Unionist; Tory; later independent; later Groupe Canadien-français |
Montreal | Moffatt, George | Unionist; Tory |
Montreal County | Delisle, Alexandre-Maurice | Unionist; Tory |
Nicolet | Morin, Augustin-Norbert | Anti-unionist; Groupe Canadien-français |
Ottawa County | Day, Charles Dewey | Unionist; Tory |
Portneuf | Aylwin, Thomas Cushing | Anti-unionist; Groupe Canadien-français |
Quebec City | Black, Henry | Unionist; Tory |
Quebec City | Burnet, David | Unionist; moderate |
Quebec County | John Neilson | Anti-unionist; Groupe Canadien-français |
Richelieu | Viger, Denis-Benjamin | Anti-unionist; Groupe Canadien-français |
Rimouski | Borne, Michel | Groupe Canadien-français |
Rouville | de Salaberry, Melchior-Alphonse | Unionist; Tory |
Saguenay | Parent, Étienne | Anti-unionist; Groupe Canadien-français |
Saint Hyacinthe | Boutillier, Thomas | Patriote |
Saint Maurice | Turcotte, Joseph-Édouard | Anti-unionist |
Shefford | Foster, Sewell | Unionist; Tory |
Sherbrooke | Hale, Edward | Unionist; Tory |
Sherbrooke County | Moore, John | Unionist; originally Tory; later Groupe Canadien-français |
Stanstead | Child, Marcus | Unionist; Tory; later Groupe Canadien-français |
Terrebonne | McCulloch, Michael | Unionist; Tory |
Three Rivers | Ogden, Charles Richard | Unionist; Tory |
Two Mountains | Robertson, Colin | Unionist; Tory |
Vaudreuil | Simpson, John | Unionist; Tory |
Verchères | Desrivières, Henri | Groupe Canadien-français |
Yamaska | Joseph-Guillaume Barthe | Patriote |
Vacancies during the First Parliament
By-elections during the First Parliament
The following members were elected in by-elections during the First Parliament.Riding | Members Elected in By-Elections | Party | Reason for Vacancy | By-election date |
Beauharnois | Wakefield, Edward Gibbon | Groupe Canadien-français; later Tory | Incumbent resigned following appointment as Warden, Trinity House, Montreal | November 9, 1842 |
Bellechasse | Turgeon, Abraham | Groupe Canadien-français | Incumbent resigned following appointment as Registrar, district of Rimouski | June 6, 1842 |
Chambly | Lacoste, Louis | Groupe Canadien-français | Incumbent resigned seat | October 23, 1843 |
Champlain | Judah, Henry | Independent liberal | Incumbent appointed to Legislative Council | September 22, 1843 |
Leinster | De Witt, Jacob | Groupe Canadien-français | Incumbent resigned to take appointment as District Registrar of Leinster | August 8, 1842 |
Montreal | Beaubien, Pierre | Groupe Canadien-français | Incumbent resigned to protest movement of provincial capital from Kingston to Montreal | November 22, 1843 |
Montreal County | Jobin, André | Groupe Canadien-français and Reformer | Seat vacated when incumbent appointed Clerk of the Crown, Montreal Sessions of the Peace, a civil service position | October 26, 1843 |
Nicolet | Viger, Louis-Michel | Groupe Canadien-français | Incumbent appointed to the bench | February 15, 1842 |
Ottawa County | Papineau, Denis-Benjamin | Groupe Canadien-français | Incumbent appointed to the bench | August 17, 1842 |
Quebec City | Chabot, Jean | Groupe Canadien-français | Incumbent resigned on bankruptcy. | September 18, 1843 |
Rimouski | Baldwin, Robert | Reformer | Incumbent resigned to allow Baldwin to stand for election | January 30, 1843 |
Rouville | Walker, William | Anti-unionist; Tory | Incumbent accepted office of profit under the Crown | July 7, 1842 |
Rouville | Franchère, Timothée | Groupe Canadien-français | Incumbent resigned due to ill-health | September 25, 1843 |
Saguenay | Morin, Augustine-Norbert | Groupe Canadien-français | Incumbent resigned to take government position | November 28, 1842 |
Saint Maurice | Turcotte, Joseph-Édouard | Anti-unionist | Required to resign seat on accepting two offices of profit under the Crown; re-elected in by-election | July 8, 1842 |
Two Mountains | Forbes, Charles John | Tory | Death of incumbent | April 18, 1842 |
Verchères | James Leslie | Anti-union; Reformer | Resignation of incumbent to allow Leslie to stand for election | December 28, 1841 |
Canada West
Members elected in the general election
The following members were elected to the Legislative Assembly from Canada West in the 1841 general election.Riding | Member | Party |
Brockville | George Sherwood | Tory |
Bytown | Stewart Derbishire | Conservative |
Carleton | James Johnston | Reformer |
Cornwall | Solomon Yeomans Chesley | Conservative |
Dundas | John Cook | |
Durham | John Tucker Williams | Tory |
Essex | John Prince | |
Frontenac | Henry Smith, Jr | Conservative |
Glengarry | John Sandfield Macdonald | Reformer |
Grenville | Samuel Crane | Reformer |
Haldimand | David Thompson | Reformer |
East Halton | Caleb Hopkins | Reformer |
West Halton | James Durand, Jr. | Reformer |
Hamilton | Allan Napier MacNab | Conservative |
Hastings | Robert Baldwin | Reformer |
Edmund Murney | Conservative | |
Huron | James McGill Strachan | Conservative |
William Dunlop | Conservative | |
Kent | Joseph Woods | Conservative |
Kingston | Anthony Manahan | Conservative |
Samuel Bealey Harrison | Reformer | |
Lanark | Malcolm Cameron | Reformer |
Leeds | James Morris | Reformer |
Lennox & Addington | John Solomon Cartwright | Conservative |
North Lincoln County | William Hamilton Merritt | Reformer |
South Lincoln | David Thorburn | |
London | Hamilton Hartley Killaly | |
Lawrence Lawrason | ||
Middlesex | Thomas Parke | Reformer |
Niagara | Edward C. Campbell | |
Henry John Boulton | Independent | |
Norfolk | Israel Wood Powell | |
North Northumberland | John Gilchrist | Reformer |
South Northumberland | George Boswell | |
Oxford | Francis Hincks | Reformer |
Prescott | Donald Macdonald | |
Prince Edward | John Philip Roblin | Reformer |
Russell | William Henry Draper | Conservative |
William Stewart | Conservative | |
Simcoe | Elmes Yelverton Steele | Reformer |
Stormont | Alexander McLean | Conservative |
Toronto | Isaac Buchanan | Reformer |
Henry Sherwood | Conservative | |
Toronto | John Henry Dunn | Reformer |
Wentworth | Harmannus Smith | |
1st York | James Hervey Price | |
2nd York | George Duggan | Conservative |
3rd York | James Edward Small | Reformer |
4th York | Louis Hippolyte LaFontaine | Reformer |