Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
law

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

Andrew George Blair

Canadian politician


Summary

Canadian politician

FieldValue
honorific-prefixThe Honourable
nameAndrew George Blair
imagePortrait of Hon. Andrew G. Blair.jpg
honorific-suffix
captionBlair, photographed between 1883 – 1903
order7th Premier of New Brunswick
term_startMarch 3, 1883
term_endJuly 17, 1896
predecessorDaniel L. Hanington
successorJames Mitchell
monarchVictoria
lieutenant_governorRobert Duncan Wilmot
Samuel Leonard Tilley
John Boyd
John James Fraser
office1MLA for York
term_start1June 25, 1878
term_end1October 22, 1892
predecessor1Robert Robinson
successor1George W. Allen
alongside1John James Fraser, Edward Ludlow Wetmore, Richard Bellamy, Thomas Colter, Frederick P. Thompson, William Wilson, George J. Colter, David R. Moore, John Anderson
office2MLA for Queens
term_start3October 22, 1892
term_end3July 17, 1896
predecessor3Thomas Hetherington
successor3Isaac W. Carpenter
alongside3Laughlin Farris
constituency_MP4Sunbury—Queen's
parliament4Canadian
predecessor4George Gerald King
successor4Robert Duncan Wilmot, Jr.
term_start4August 25, 1896
term_end4November 7, 1900
constituency_MP5City of St. John
parliament5Canadian
predecessor5John V. Ellis
successor5John Waterhouse Daniel
term_start5November 7, 1900
term_end5December 27, 1903
birth_date
birth_placeFredericton, New Brunswick, Canada
death_date
death_placeFredericton, New Brunswick, Canada
partyLiberal
spouse
children2 sons and 5 daughters
relativesAndrew Brewin (grandson)
alma_materFredericton Collegiate School
occupationLawyer, lecturer
professionpolitician

|honorific-prefix=The Honourable |honorific-suffix= Samuel Leonard Tilley John Boyd John James Fraser Andrew George Blair (March 7, 1844 – January 25, 1907) was a Canadian politician in New Brunswick, Canada. He served as the seventh premier of New Brunswick for 13 years and 136 days, the second-longest tenure in the province's history, behind Richard Hatfield's tenure of 16 years and 310 days.

He was first elected to the Legislative Assembly of New Brunswick in 1878 after unsuccessful attempts in the previous two elections. Though Blair was a supporter of Sir John A. Macdonald's federal Liberal-Conservatives, he joined the parliamentary opposition in the legislature and, in 1879, became leader of the opposition to the Conservative government of Premier John James Fraser. He molded the disparate opposition into the modern Liberal Party of New Brunswick, instituting party platforms or manifestos. He launched the first province-wide political campaign in an era when campaign had been run largely on a constituency basis. He took the party to power in 1883, winning enough support in the newly elected legislature to form a government. Blair became premier and Attorney-General.

Blair's government built a three-quarters of a mile long bridge across the Saint John River, linking Fredericton with villages and factories, notably that of Boss Gibson, on the other side of the river, in spite of opposition by the federal government, which maintained that it was beyond provincial power to do so. His government also went to court to win the right to grant liquor licenses. He also extended the franchise, which had been exclusively male, to widows and unmarried women who owned property. He was opposed, however, to universal female suffrage. His government also abolished the Legislative Council (the legislature's Upper House).

The Liberal government almost lost the 1889 election but was able to stay in power with the support of independent Members of the Legislative Assembly (MLAs). Blair lost his own seat in the 1892 election, due to Protestant opposition to his policy of accommodating Acadians and other Catholics. Blair had appointed several Acadians and other Catholics to his cabinet and other government positions. Blair was able to re-enter the house through a by-election.

After leading his party to a major electoral victory in 1895, Blair left provincial politics in 1896 when he was appointed Minister of Railways and Canals in the federal Cabinet of Liberal Prime Minister Wilfrid Laurier. He was sworn in as Minister of Railways and Canals on 13 July 1896, entered the House of Commons of Canada in an August 1896 by-election for Sunbury and Queens riding, and was re-elected in the 1900 election.

In December 1901, Blair's daughter Bessie drowned while skating on the ill-frozen Ottawa River at a party put on by the Governor-General; Henry Harper dove in to try to rescue her, but drowned as well. His actions are remembered by the statue on Parliament Hill to Sir Galahad.

Blair notified the government of his resignation on 13 July 1903; in his speech on 16 July he outlined his reasons for his opposition to Laurier's plan to build the Grand Trunk Pacific Railway. The official New Brunswick biography has the date of his resignation 20 July. He did not see why the government "should build and own the lean section . . . and provide a company with government credit to enable them to build and operate the fat section," and referred to discussions about the railway that Wilfrid Laurier had had with other ministers behind his back, although he was the Minister charged with the portfolio. He further stated that other Ministers had been allowed to discuss with Grand Trunk officers plans for the transcontinental without informing him.

In order to prevent him from becoming a major opposition figure, Laurier appointed Blair to head the Board of Railway Commissioners in December 1903, taking Blair out of active politics and out of the House of Commons. However, Blair resigned from the Board sixteen days before the 1904 election in order to campaign against Laurier. He withdrew from the campaign, however, after discussions with Laurier.

Personal life and death

Blair died on January 25, 1907, of a heart attack during a dinner party in Fredericton, New Brunswick. He was buried in the Beechwood Cemetery in Ottawa, Ontario.

One of Blair's grandsons, Andrew Brewin, served as a member of Parliament for the New Democratic Party.

References

References

  1. Young, D.M.. "Blair, Andrew George".
  2. [http://parl.canadiana.ca/view/oop.debates_HOC0903_03/708?r=0&s=1 parl.canadiana.ca: Debates of the House of Commons, 13 July 1903, column 6540, p.708 - "Resignation of the Hon. Mr. Blair"]
  3. [http://parl.canadiana.ca/view/oop.debates_HOC0903_03/806?r=0&s=1 parl.canadiana.ca: Debates of the House of Commons, 16 July 1903, column 6735, p.806 - "Resignation of the Hon. Mr. Blair"]
  4. He spoke about the reason for his resignation for five hours in the House of Commons on 11 August.[https://web.archive.org/web/20120319030219/http://www.gnb.ca/legis/leglibbib/Special_Projects/premiers-bios/english/AGBlair.pdf copy of Blair Biography by Government of New Brunswick at wayback machine]
  5. [http://parl.canadiana.ca/view/oop.debates_HOC0903_04/423?r=0&s=1 parl.canadiana.ca: Debates of the House of Commons, 11 August 1903, column 8406, p.423 - "National Transcontinental Railway"]
  6. (26 Jan 1907). "Hon. A.G. Blair Dies of Heart Failure; Tragically Sudden End Last Night". The Ottawa Journal.
  7. (September 24, 1971). "MP To Be Speaker At Meeting Monday". Saint John Times Globe.
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 Andrew George Blair — 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