释义 |
- Seats per political party
- Member list
- Other elected MLAs
- Cabinet Ministers Boucher de Boucherville Cabinet (1875-1878) Joly de Lotbinière Cabinet (1878)
- References
The 3rd Legislative Assembly of Quebec was the provincial legislature in Quebec, Canada that existed from July 7, 1875, to May 1, 1878. The Quebec Conservative Party led by Charles Boucher de Boucherville formed a majority government in the 1875 elections. de Boucherville was removed from office in 1878 after a conflict with the Lieutenant Governor Luc Letellier de Saint-Just. The Quebec Liberal Party led by Henri-Gustave Joly de Lotbinière formed a minority government and was the governing party for the first time since the creation of the Legislative Assembly of Quebec. Lotbinière immediately called an election due to the minority status of his government. Seats per political partyAffiliation | Members
| {{Canadian politics/party colours/Conservative (historical)/row}}Conservative Party | 44 | {{Canadian party colour|QC|Liberal|row}}Parti libéral du Québec | 19 | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Conservative (historical)/row}}Conservative Independent | 2 | Total
| 65 | Government Majority
| 25 |
Member listThis was the list of members of the Legislative Assembly of Quebec that were elected in the 1875 election: Name | Party | Riding | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Conservative (historical)/row}}Sydney Robert Bellingham | Conservative | Argenteuil | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Conservative (historical)/row}}Pierre-Samuel Gendron | Conservative | Bagot | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Conservative (historical)/row}}François-Xavier Dulac | Conservative | Beauce | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Liberal/row}}Élie-Hercule Bisson | Libéral | Beauharnois | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Conservative (historical)/row}}Pierre Fradet | Conservative | Bellechasse | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Liberal/row}}Louis Sylvestre | Libéral | Berthier | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Conservative (historical)/row}}Pierre-Clovis Beauchesne | Conservative | Bonaventure | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Conservative (historical)/row}}William Warren Lynch | Conservative | Brome | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Liberal/row}}Raymond Préfontaine | Libéral | Chambly | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Conservative (historical)/row}}Dominique-Napoléon Saint-Cyr | Conservative | Champlain | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Conservative (historical)/row}}Onésime Gauthier | Conservative | Charlevoix | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Liberal/row}}Édouard Laberge | Libéral | Châteauguay | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Conservative (historical)/row}}William Evan Price | Conservative | Chicoutimi et Saguenay | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Conservative (historical)/row}}William Sawyer | Conservative | Compton | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Conservative (historical)/row}}Gédéon Ouimet | Conservative | Deux-Montagnes | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Conservative (historical)/row}}Louis-Napoléon Larochelle | Conservative | Dorchester | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Conservative (historical)/row}}William John Watts | Conservative Independent | Drummond et Arthabaska | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Conservative (historical)/row}}Pierre-Étienne Fortin | Conservative | Gaspé | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Conservative (historical)/row}}Louis Beaubien | Conservative | Hochelaga | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Liberal/row}}Alexander Cameron | Libéral | Huntingdon | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Liberal/row}}Louis Molleur | Libéral | Iberville | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Conservative (historical)/row}}Pamphile-Gaspard Verreault | Conservative | Islet | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Conservative (historical)/row}}Narcisse Lecavalier | Conservative | Jacques Cartier | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Conservative (historical)/row}}Vincent-Paul Lavallée | Conservative | Joliette | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Conservative (historical)/row}}Charles-François Roy | Conservative | Kamouraska | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Conservative (historical)/row}}Léon-Benoît-Alfred Charlebois | Conservative | Laprairie | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Conservative (historical)/row}}Onuphe Peltier | Conservative | L'Assomption | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Conservative (historical)/row}}Louis-Onésime Loranger | Conservative | Laval | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Conservative (historical)/row}}Étienne-Théodore Pâquet | Conservative | Lévis | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Liberal/row}}Henri-Gustave Joly de Lotbinière | Libéral | Lotbinière | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Conservative (historical)/row}}Moïse Houde | Conservative | Maskinongé | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Liberal/row}}George Irvine | Libéral | Mégantic | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Conservative (historical)/row}}George Barnard Baker | Conservative | Missisquoi | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Conservative (historical)/row}}Louis-Gustave Martin | Conservative | Montcalm | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Conservative (historical)/row}}Auguste-Charles-Philippe Landry | Conservative | Montmagny | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Conservative (historical)/row}}Auguste-Réal Angers | Conservative | Montmorency | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Conservative (historical)/row}}Alexander Walker Ogilvie | Conservative | Montréal Centre | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Conservative (historical)/row}}Louis-Olivier Taillon | Conservative | Montréal Est | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Conservative (historical)/row}}John Wait McGauvran | Conservative | Montreal Ouest | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Liberal/row}}Laurent-David Lafontaine | Libéral | Napierville | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Conservative (historical)/row}}François-Xavier-Ovide Méthot | Conservative | Nicolet | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Conservative (historical)/row}}Louis Duhamel | Conservative | Ottawa | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Conservative (historical)/row}}Levi Ruggles Church | Conservative | Pontiac | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Conservative (historical)/row}}Praxède Larue | Conservative | Portneuf | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Conservative (historical)/row}}Pierre Garneau | Conservative | Québec-Comté | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Liberal/row}}Rémi-Ferdinand Rinfret dit Malouin | Libéral | Québec-Centre | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Liberal/row}}Joseph Shehyn | Libéral | Québec-Est | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Conservative (historical)/row}}John Hearn | Conservative | Québec-Ouest | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Conservative (historical)/row}}Michel Mathieu | Conservative | Richelieu | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Conservative (historical)/row}}Jacques Picard | Conservative | Richmond et Wolfe | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Conservative (historical)/row}}Alexandre Chauveau | Conservative Independent | Rimouski | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Liberal/row}}Victor Robert | Libéral | Rouville | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Liberal/row}}Pierre Bachand | Libéral | St. Hyacinthe | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Liberal/row}}Félix-Gabriel Marchand | Libéral | St. Jean | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Conservative (historical)/row}}Élie Lacerte | Conservative | St. Maurice | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Liberal/row}}Maurice Laframboise | Libéral | Shefford | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Conservative (historical)/row}}Joseph Gibb Robertson | Conservative | Sherbrooke | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Conservative (historical)/row}}Humbert Saveuse de Beaujeu | Conservative Independent | Soulanges | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Conservative (historical)/row}}John Thornton | Conservative | Stanstead | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Conservative (historical)/row}}Georges-Honoré Deschênes | Conservative | Témiscouata | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Conservative (historical)/row}}Joseph-Adolphe Chapleau | Conservative | Terrebonne | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Conservative (historical)/row}}Henri-Gédéon Malhiot | Conservative | Trois-Rivières | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Conservative (historical)/row}}Émery Lalonde, Sr. | Conservative | Vaudreuil | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Liberal/row}}Joseph Daigle | Libéral | Verchères | {{Canadian politics/party colours/Liberal/row}}Jonathan Saxton Campbell Würtele | Libéral | Yamaska |
Other elected MLAsOther MLAs were elected in by-elections during the term - Charles Champagne, Quebec Conservative Party, Deux-Montagnes, March 3, 1876
- Andrew Kennedy, Quebec Conservative Party, Mégantic, April 18, 1876
- Henri-René-Arthur Turcotte, Conservative Independent, Trois-Rivières, April 18, 1876
- Flavien Dupont, Quebec Conservative Party, Bagot, July 7, 1876
- Charles-Édouard Houde, Quebec Conservative Party, Nicolet, August 18, 1876
- Louis-Napoléon Fortin, Quebec Liberal Party, Montmagny, November 30, 1876
- Joseph-Israël Tarte, Quebec Conservative Party, Bonaventure, February 22, 1877
- Joseph Dumont, Quebec Liberal Party, Kamouraska, March 19, 1877
- Richard Alleyn, Quebec Conservative Party, Québec Ouest, December 17, 1877
Cabinet MinistersBoucher de Boucherville Cabinet (1875-1878)- Prime Minister and Executive Council President: Charles-Eugène Boucher de Boucherville
- Agriculture and public works: Pierre Garneau (1875-1876), Charles-Eugène Boucher de Boucherville (1876-1878)
- Crown Lands: Henri-Gédéon Mailhiot (1875-1876), Pierre Garneau (1876-1878)
- Attorney General: Levi Ruggles Church (1875-1876), Auguste-Réal Angers (1876-1878)
- State Education: Charles-Eugène Boucher de Boucherville (1874-1876)
- Secretary and Registry: Charles-Eugène Boucher de Boucherville (1874-1876), Joseph-Adolphe Chapleau (1876-1878)
- Treasurer: Joseph Gibb Robertson (1875-1876), Levi Ruggles Church (1876-1878)
- Solicitor General: Auguste-Réal Angers (1875-1876), Georges Barnard Baker (1876-1878)
- Legislative Council President: Félix-Hyacinthe Lemaire (1875-1876) John Jones Ross (1976-1978)
- Members without portfolios (1876-1878): John Jones Ross, Georges Barnard Baker, Joseph-Adolphe Chapleau
Joly de Lotbinière Cabinet (1878)- Prime Minister and Executive Council President: Henri-Gustave Joly de Lotbinière
- Agriculture and public works: Henri-Gustave Joly de Lotbinière
- Crown Lands: François Langelier
- Attorney General: David Alexander Ross
- Secretary and Registry: Félix-Gabriel Marchand
- Treasurer: Pierre Bachand
- Solicitor General: Alexandre Chauveau
- Legislative Council President: Henry Starnes
References- 1875 election results
- List of Historical Cabinet Ministers
{{National Assembly of Quebec}} 1 : Terms of the Quebec Legislature |