Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
geography/united-kingdom

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

9th Parliament of British Columbia

Legislative assembly of British Columbia from 1900 to 1903


Summary

Legislative assembly of British Columbia from 1900 to 1903

The 9th Legislative Assembly of British Columbia sat from 1900 to 1903. The members were elected in the British Columbia general election held in June 1900. James Dunsmuir served as Premier until he resigned in November 21, 1902. Dunsmuir was succeeded by Edward Gawler Prior, who was dismissed by the lieutenant governor for conflict of interest. Richard McBride became Premier in June 1903.

John Paton Booth served as speaker until his death in February 1902. Charles Edward Pooley succeeded Booth as speaker.

Members of the 9th Parliament

The following members were elected to the assembly in 1900. This was the last election where political parties were not part of the official process, although a number of candidates declared party affiliations:

MemberElectoral districtPartyFirst elected / previously electedNo.# of term(s)
Alan Webster NeillAlberniProvincialAffiliated with the Provincial Party led by Francis Lovett Carter-Cotton18982nd term
Joseph HunterCaribooOppositionopposed to the Martin administration1871, 1890, 19004th term*
Samuel Augustus RogersOpposition1890, 19003rd term*
Charles William Digby CliffordCassiarConservative/Opposition18982nd term
James StablesIndependent Government??19001st term
Lewis Alfred MounceComoxOpposition19001st term
Charles Herbert DickieCowichanIndependent/Conservative19001st term
Wilmer Cleveland WellsEast Kootenay NorthIndependent/Provincial18992nd term
Edwin Clarke SmithEast Kootenay SouthGovernmentGovernment candidates supported the Martin administration19001st term
William Henry HaywardEsquimaltIndependent Opposition19001st term
Charles Edward PooleyOpposition18826th term
James Douglas PrenticeLillooet EastOpposition/ProvincialCandidate listed with differing affiliations depending on the source1894, 18983rd term*
Alfred Wellington SmithLillooet WestIndependent/Opposition18895th term
Ralph SmithNanaimo CityLabourEndorsed by Nanaimo Trades and Labour Council19001st term
James Hurst Hawthornthwaite (1901)Independent Labour19011st term
John Cunningham BrownNew Westminster CityGovernment1890, 19002nd term
Thomas Gifford (1901)Opposition19011st term
William Wallace Burns McInnesNorth NanaimoIndependent19001st term
John Paton BoothNorth VictoriaIndependent Liberal1871, 18905th term*
Thomas Wilson Paterson (1902)Independent19021st term
James DunsmuirSouth NanaimoOpposition18982nd term
David McEwen EbertsSouth VictoriaOpposition18904th term
James Ford GardenVancouver CityConservativeAffiliated with Liberal Conservative Party led by Charles Wilson19001st term
Hugh Bowie GilmourGovernment19001st term
Joseph MartinGovernment18982nd term
Robert Garnett TatlowConservative19001st term
Richard HallVictoria CityOpposition18982nd term
Henry Dallas HelmckenOpposition18943rd term
Albert Edward McPhillipsOpposition18982nd term
John Herbert TurnerOpposition18865th term
Edward Gawler Prior (1902)Government1886, 19022nd term*
John HoustonWest Kootenay-NelsonProvincial19001st term
Thomas TaylorWest Kootenay-RevelstokeConservative19001st term
Smith CurtisWest Kootenay-RosslandOpposition19001st term
Robert Francis GreenWest Kootenay-SlocanProvincial18982nd term
Charles William MunroWestminster-ChilliwhackProvincial18982nd term
John OliverWestminster-DeltaGovernment19001st term
Richard McBrideWestminster-DewdneyConservative18982nd term
Thomas KiddWestminster-RichmondProvincial18943rd term
Price EllisonYale-EastOpposition18982nd term
Frederick John FultonYale-NorthIndependent/Opposition19001st term
Denis MurphyYale-WestOpposition/Provincial19001st term
Charles Augustus Semlin (1903)Opposition1871, 1882, 19037th term*

Notes:

By-elections

By-elections were held for the following members appointed to the provincial cabinet, as was required at the time:

  • David McEwen Eberts, Attorney General, acclaimed July 4, 1900
  • John Herbert Turner, Minister of Finance and Agriculture, acclaimed July 4, 1900
  • Wilmer Cleveland Wells, Chief Commissioner of Lands and Mines, acclaimed July 17, 1900
  • James Douglas Prentice, Provincial Secretary and Minister of Education, acclaimed July 17, 1900
  • James Dunsmuir, Premier, acclaimed July 17, 1900
  • Richard McBride, Minister of Mines, acclaimed July 17, 1900
  • John Cunningham Brown, Provincial Secretary, defeated by Thomas Gifford on September 25, 1901
  • William Wallace Burns McInnes, Provincial Secretary and Minister of Education, elected January 30, 1903

By-elections were held to replace members for various other reasons:

Electoral districtMember electedElection dateReason
Nanaimo CityJames Hurst HawthornthwaiteFebruary 20, 1901AcclaimedR. Smith resigned to contest federal election
Vancouver CityJames Ford GardenFebruary 19, 1901J.F. Garden resigned to contest federal election
Victoria CityEdward Gawler PriorMarch 10, 1902J.H. Turner resigned to accept position of Agent-General
North VictoriaThomas Wilson PatersonDecember 23, 1902Death of J.P. Booth on February 25, 1902
Yale-WestCharles Augustus SemlinFebruary 26, 1903D. Murphy resigned after being named to cabinet; he subsequently withdrew from the by-election citing "personal reasons"

Notes:

Other changes

  • Westminster-Dewdney (res. Richard McBride, appointed premier June 1, 1903)
  • Vancouver City (res. Robert Garnett Tatlow, appointed Minister of Finance and Agriculture June 4, 1903)
  • Victoria City (res. Albert Edward McPhillips, appointed Attorney General June 4, 1903)
  • West Kootenay-Slocan (res. Robert Francis Green, appointed Minister of Mines June 4, 1903)

Notes

References

References

  1. "Electoral History of British Columbia 1871-1986". Elections BC.
  2. "Premiers of British Columbia 1871-". BC Legislature.
  3. "Speakers of the Legislative Assembly of British Columbia 1872-". BC Legislature.
  4. (1913). "Who's who in western Canada". Canadian Press Association.
  5. Mouat, Jeremy. "Turner, John Herbert".
  6. "Political and Ministry Personalities 1842–1982". British Columbia Ministry of Forests, Lands and Natural Resource Operations.
  7. Gosnell, R. Edward. (1906). "A history of British Columbia".
  8. Karr, Clarence. (1998). "James Dunsmuir".
  9. Roy, Patricia E. (1998). "Richard McBride".
  10. "McInnes, William Wallace Burns". Parliament of Canada.
  11. "British Columbia Executive Council Appointments 1871–1986". BC Legislature.
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about 9th Parliament of British Columbia — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report