释义 |
- Canada East
- Canada West
- References
- External links
The 2nd Parliament of the Province of Canada was in session from November 28, 1844, to December 1847. Elections for the Legislative Assembly were held in the Province of Canada in October 1844. All sessions were held at Montreal, Canada East. The Speaker of this parliament was Allan Napier MacNab. Canada East Riding | Member | Party | Beauharnois | Eden Colvile | Tory | Bellechasse | Augustin-Norbert Morin | Patriote | Berthier | David Morrison Armstrong | Patriote | Bonaventure | John Le Boutillier | Conservative | Chambly | Louis Lacoste | Patriote | Champlain | Louis Guillet | Patriote | Deux-Montagnes | William Henry Scott | Reformer | Dorchester | Pierre-Elzéar Taschereau[1] | Patriote | Joseph-André Taschereau (1845)[2] | Patriote | François-Xavier Lemieux (1847) | Patriote | Drummond | Robert Nugent Watts | Conservative | Gaspé | Robert Christie | Independent | Huntingdon | Benjamin-Henri Le Moine | Patriote | Kamouraska | Amable Berthelot | Patriote | Leinster | Jacob De Witt | Patriote | L'Islet | Étienne-Paschal Taché | Patriote | Lotbinière | Joseph Laurin | Patriote | Mégantic | Dominick Daly | Conservative | Missisquoi | James Smith [3] | Conservative | William Badgley (1847) | Conservative | Montmorency | Joseph-Édouard Cauchon | Patriote | Montréal | George Moffatt | Tory | Montréal | Clément-Charles Sabrevois de Bleury | Conservative | Montréal (county) | André Jobin | Reformer | Nicolet | Antoine-Prosper Méthot | Patriote | Ottawa | Denis-Benjamin Papineau | Reformer | Portneuf | Lewis Thomas Drummond | Reformer | Quebec County | Pierre-Joseph-Olivier Chauveau | Reformer | Quebec City | Thomas Cushing Aylwin | Patriote | Quebec City | Jean Chabot | Conservative | Richelieu | Wolfred Nelson | Patriote | Rimouski | Louis Bertrand | Patriote | Rouville | Timothée Franchère | Patriote | Saguenay | Marc-Pascal de Sales Laterrière (1845)[4] | Patriote | St. Hyacinthe | Thomas Boutillier | Patriote | Saint-Maurice | François Lesieur Desaulniers | Patriote | Shefford | Sewell Foster | Conservative | Sherbrooke | Edward Hale | Conservative | Sherbrooke (county) | Samuel Brooks | Conservative | Stanstead | John McConnell | Conservative | Terrebonne | Louis-Hippolyte Lafontaine | Patriote | Trois-Rivières | Edward Greive[5] | Conservative | Denis-Benjamin Viger (1845) | Patriote | Vaudreuil | Jacques-Philippe Lantier | Patriote | Verchères | James Leslie | Patriote | Yamaska | Léon Rousseau | Patriote |
Notes: Canada West Riding | Member | Party | Brockville | George Sherwood | Tory | Bytown | William Stewart | Conservative | Carleton | James Johnston [6] | Reformer | George Lyon (1846) | Conservative | Cornwall | Rolland Macdonald [7] | John Hillyard Cameron (1846) | Conservative | Dundas | George Greenfield Macdonell [8] | Durham | John Tucker Williams | Tory | Essex | John Prince | Frontenac | Henry Smith, Jr | Conservative | Glengarry | John Sandfield Macdonald | Reformer | Grenville | Hamilton Dibble Jessup | Conservative | Haldimand | David Thompson | East Halton | George Chalmers | Conservative | West Halton | James Webster | Conservative | Hamilton | Allan Napier MacNab | Conservative | Hastings | Edmund Murney | Huron | William Dunlop [9] | Conservative | William Cayley (1846) | Conservative | Kent | Samuel Bealey Harrison [10] | Reformer | Joseph Woods (1845) | Conservative | Kingston | John A. Macdonald | Conservative | Lanark | Malcolm Cameron | Reformer | Leeds | Ogle Robert Gowan | Conservative | Lennox & Addington | Benjamin Seymour | Tory | North Lincoln County | William Hamilton Merritt | Reformer | South Lincoln | James Cummings | Conservative | London | Lawrence Lawrason [11] | Conservative | William Henry Draper (1845) [12] | Conservative | John Wilson (1847) | Conservative | Middlesex | Edward Ermatinger | Conservative | Niagara (town) | Walter Hamilton Dickson | Norfolk | Israel Wood Powell | North Northumberland | Adam H Meyers | South Northumberland | George Barker Hall | Conservative | Oxford | Robert Riddell | Conservative | Prescott | Neil Stewart | Prince Edward | John Philip Roblin [13] | Reformer | Roger B Conger (1847) | Russell | Archibald Petrie | Conservative | Simcoe | William Benjamin Robinson | Conservative | Stormont | Donald Aeneas MacDonell | Toronto | William Henry Boulton | Conservative | Toronto | Henry Sherwood | Conservative | Wentworth | Harmannus Smith | 1st York | James Hervey Price | 2nd York | George Duggan | Conservative | 3rd York | James Edward Small [14] | Reformer | George Monro (1844) | Conservative | 4th York | Robert Baldwin | Reformer |
Notes: {{s-start}}{{succession box | before=1st Parliament of the Province of Canada | title=Parliaments in the Province of Canada | years=1844-1847 | after=3rd Parliament of the Province of Canada}}{{s-end}} References 1. ^died in July 1845; Joseph-André Taschereau was elected in a by-election held in September 1845. 2. ^resigned in May 1847 to become a judge; François-Xavier Lemieux was elected in a by-election held in July 1847. 3. ^resigned after being named judge; William Badgley was elected in a by-election held in June 1847. 4. ^Augustin-Norbert Morin was elected in both Bellechasse and Saguenay, choosing to sit in Bellechasse; Marc-Pascal de Sales Laterrière was elected to represent Saguenay in an 1845 by-election. 5. ^died in June 1845; Denis-Benjamin Viger was elected in a by-election held in July 1845. 6. ^resigned in May 1846; George Lyon was elected in a by-election held in June 1846. 7. ^resigned his seat in 1846 to allow John Hillyard Cameron to be elected in a by-election in August 1846. 8. ^{{cite web |url= http://www.archivesducomtedeglengarry.ca/Glengarry_pdf/The-Glengarry-News/1911-1920/1912/Jun/06-14-1912.pdf|title= Local News of All Sorts|author= |date= June 14, 1912|website=Glengarry County Archives |publisher= The Alexandria News|access-date=February 10, 2019 |quote=}} 9. ^resigned to accept an appointment; this allowed William Cayley to run for his seat in February 1846. 10. ^resigned in 1845 to accept an appointment; Joseph Woods won the seat in a by-election. 11. ^gave up his seat so that William Henry Draper could lead the government in the assembly. 12. ^resigned in 1847 and John Wilson won the seat in a by-election. 13. ^resigned in 1846 to accept other appointments in Prince Edward County; R B Conger was elected to his seat in a by-election. 14. ^disqualified in 1844; George Monro was declared elected.
- Upper Canadian politics in the 1850s, Underhill (and others), University of Toronto Press (1967)
- {{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=t4ssAAAAYAAJ |title=Political appointments and elections in the province of Canada. 1841 to 1860 |year=1860 |publisher=St. Michael & Darveau |last=Côté |first=George Oliver}}
External links - [https://www.webcitation.org/5Qj1yveF3?url=http://www.nosracines.ca/e/toc.asp?id%3D3098 Ontario's parliament buildings ; or, A century of legislation, 1792-1892 : a historical sketch]
- [https://web.archive.org/web/20091217055751/http://www.assnat.qc.ca/fra/patrimoine/ Assemblée nationale du Québec (French)]
{{DEFAULTSORT:2nd Parliament Of The Province Of Canada}} 3 : Parliaments of the Province of Canada|1844 establishments in Canada|1847 disestablishments in Canada |