George Howard Ferguson
The Hon. George Howard Ferguson
9th Premier of Ontario
In office
July 16, 1923  December 15, 1930
MonarchGeorge V
Lieutenant GovernorHenry Cockshutt
William Donald Ross
Preceded byErnest Charles Drury
Succeeded byGeorge Stewart Henry
Canadian High Commissioner to the United Kingdom
In office
1930–1935
Prime MinisterR.B. Bennett,
W.L. Mackenzie King
Preceded byLucien Turcotte Pacaud (acting)
Succeeded byVincent Massey
Ontario MPP
In office
January 25, 1905  December 15, 1930
Preceded byRobert Joynt
Succeeded byJames Alfred Sanderson
ConstituencyGrenville
Personal details
Born(1870-06-18)June 18, 1870
Kemptville, Ontario
DiedFebruary 21, 1946(1946-02-21) (aged 75)
Toronto, Ontario
Resting placeMount Pleasant Cemetery, Toronto
Political partyConservative
SpouseElla Cummings
Alma materUniversity of Toronto
Osgoode Hall Law School

George Howard Ferguson, PC (June 18, 1870 February 21, 1946) was the ninth premier of Ontario, from 1923 to 1930. He was a Conservative member of the Legislative Assembly of Ontario from 1905 to 1930 who represented the eastern provincial riding of Grenville.

Background

The son of Charles Frederick Ferguson, who served in the Canadian House of Commons, Ferguson studied at the University of Toronto and Osgoode Hall, was called to the Ontario bar in 1894, and returned to Kemptville to practise. Ferguson was elected to the municipal council and served three years as reeve of Kemptville. He married Ella Cumming in 1896.

Early political career

First elected to the Legislative Assembly of Ontario in the 1905 election, Ferguson served as Minister of Lands, Forest, and Mines in the government of William Howard Hearst from 1914 to 1919. Ferguson approved the reservation of 5,000 square miles (12,950 km2) of pulpwood on crown land to the Mead Corporation,[1] and a further 1,500 square miles (3,885 km2) to Abitibi Power and Paper Company[2] although the Crown Timber Act required pulp limits to be sold by public tender.[1] He declared, "My ambition has been to see the largest paper industry in the world established in the Province, and my attitude towards the pulp and paper industry has been directed towards assisting in bringing this about."[2] After becoming Premier of Ontario in 1923, Ferguson reserved a further 3,000 square miles (7,770 km2) to Abitibi.[3]

In addition, he sold timber limits to the Shevlin-Clarke Lumber Company (headed by the fellow Conservative James Arthur Mathieu) for less than half the price they would have normally fetched,[4] and the company later paid a fine of $1.5 million for breaching the Crown Timber Act.[5] The transactions were criticized in a subsequent inquiry,[6] in which the commission reported:

We are of the opinion that no officer, Minister or otherwise, should have the power to grant rights over large areas of the public domain at will without regard to Regulation; that power was never contemplated by the statutes; it does not at present exist, and should not be given to any individual. Such an arbitrary power subject to no control is obviously open to abuse.[1]

Ferguson became leader of the Conservative Party upon the defeat of the Hearst government that year.

Premiership

In the 1923 election, the Ontario Conservative Party came to power under Ferguson's leadership by defeating the United Farmers of Ontario-Labour coalition government of Ernest C. Drury. The Conservatives won 75 of the 111 seats in the legislature. Ferguson's government encouraged private investment in industry and the development of the province's natural resources as a means of achieving prosperity. It was re-elected in the 1926 election with 72 seats and in 1929 with 90 seats.

French policy

Ferguson (left) with Canadian Prime Minister William Lyon Mackenzie King (centre) and Quebec Premier Louis-Alexandre Taschereau at the Dominion-Provincial Conference, November 23, 1927.

In 1911, Ferguson argued in the legislature that "no language other than English should be used as a medium of instruction in the schools of this Province" although that a significant proportion of the population was French-Canadian. Sectarian politics was still rife in Ontario, and the Conservatives relied on a base of Orange support. Ferguson was prepared to pander to the Orangemen with anti-Catholic and anti-French rhetoric.

In 1912, the Ontario government passed Regulation 17, which greatly restricted the use of French language instruction. The legislation outraged Quebec and was an irritant to national unity during the First World War. When Ferguson became premier, he reversed himself by moderating the legislation and allowing more French-language instruction. His government, however, refused to extend funding for the Catholic separate schools past Grade 8.

Ferguson's reversal on Regulation 17 was a concession needed for his alliance with Quebec Premier Louis-Alexandre Taschereau. Ferguson and Taschereau formed an axis against the federal government to demand more provincial rights and defend the provinces' ownership of natural resources such as water power (hydro-electric generation).

Liquor policy

The Ferguson government, eager for new tax revenue, held a plebiscite in 1924 to soften the province's temperance laws. A slim majority voted against prohibition, which led Ferguson's government to permit the sale of beer with an alcohol content of no more than 4.4 proof, about 2.2%. Such brew became known as Fergie's foam.

The 1926 provincial election was fought on the issue of the government's proposal to repeal the Ontario Temperance Act and to permit controlled sales of liquor in government owned stores. Attorney-General William Folger Nickle, who had supported the government's earlier decision to allow the sale of low-alcohol beer, was opposed to going any further softening of temperance laws and resigned from Cabinet to run against the government as a Prohibitionist candidate against the repeal of the law. Ferguson's Conservatives were re-elected with a slightly-reduced majority.

In 1927, the government introduced legislation to establish the Liquor Control Board of Ontario and to allow the sale of alcohol by government-owned and operated liquor stores. That moderate stance on temperance allowed the government to isolate the Liberals, who until 1930 took a hard prohibitionist stance by opposing even regulated liquor sales and so alienated all but the most hardline temperance advocates.

Other issues

The Tories remained hostile to labour and immigrants and were not prepared to provide social relief when the Great Depression threw thousands out of work and into poverty. The Ferguson government also opposed federal government plans for an old-age pension.

Later life

In December 1930, Ferguson left provincial politics to accept an appointment as Canadian High Commissioner in London. He was succeeded as party leader and premier by George Stewart Henry.

From 1945 to 1946, he served as Chancellor of the University of Western Ontario.

He also gave his name to the Ferguson Block, a government office building at Queen's Park in Toronto as well as the residence cafeteria at University College in the University of Toronto, which is called the Howard Ferguson Dining Hall. A University College scholarship is named after him.

Ferguson died on February 21, 1946, in Toronto.[7]

References

  1. 1 2 3 Nelles 2005, p. 387.
  2. 1 2 Nelles 2005, p. 388.
  3. Nelles 2005, p. 395.
  4. Nelles 2005, p. 386.
  5. "Mixed Division on Timber Bill in Legislature". Ottawa Citizen. March 27, 1922. p. 2., discussing the adoption of The Shevlin-Clarke Timber License Act, 1922, S.O. 1922, c. 20
  6. "Lumber Company is Charged with Fraud". Toronto World. November 2, 1920. p. 5.
  7. "Howard Ferguson Funeral Saturday". Montreal Gazette. The Canadian Press. 1946-02-22. p. 12 via newspapers.com.

Further reading

Bibliography

  • Oliver, Peter. G. Howard Ferguson : Ontario Tory. Toronto : University of Toronto Press, 1977.
  • Oliver, Peter. Public & private persons : the Ontario political culture 1914–1934. Toronto  : Clarke Irwin, 1975.
  • Chambers, EJ Canadian Parliamentary Guide, 1916

Other

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