- Herbert Greenfield
Infobox_President
name = Hon. Herbert Greenfield
order = 4thPremier of Alberta
term_start = August 13, 1921
term_end = November 23, 1925
predecessor = Charles Stewart
successor =John Edward Brownlee
office1 = Member of theLegislative Assembly of Alberta for Peace River
term_start1 = December 9, 1921
term_end1 = June 28, 1926
predecessor1 =Donald MacBeth Kennedy
successor1 =Hugh Allen
office2 = Alberta Minister of Municipal Affairs
term_start2 = 1923
term_end2 = November 23, 1925
predecessor2 =Richard Gavin Reid
successor2 =Richard Gavin Reid
office3 = Alberta Provincial Secretary
term_start3 = August 13, 1921
term_end3 = 1923
predecessor3 =Jean Côté
successor =John E. Brownlee
office4 = Alberta Provincial Treasurer
term_start4 = August 13, 1921
term_end4 = 1923
predecessor4 =Charles R. Mitchell
successor4 =John Russell Love
birth_date = November 25, 1869
birth_place =Winchester ,England ,United Kingdom
death_date = August 23, 1949 (aged 79)
death_place =Calgary ,Alberta
children = Franklin Harris Greenfield
Arnold Leake Greenfield
restingplace = Union Cemetery, Calgary
party =United Farmers of Alberta
spouse = Elizabeth Harris (1900–1922)
Marjorie Greenwood Cormack (1926–1949)
occupation = Farmer|Herbert W. Greenfield (
November 25 ,1869 inWinchester ,England –August 23 ,1949 inCalgary ), Canadian politician, was Premier ofAlberta between 1921 and 1925.When the
United Farmers of Alberta swept to power in the 1921 election, they did not have a leader. Following the election, the UFA looked for someone to become premier of the province.Henry Wise Wood , the UFA President, declined the position.John E. Brownlee was approached, but since he was a lawyer rather than a farmer, he declined.Greenfield was president of the Alberta Association of Municipal Districts and an interim Vice-President of the UFA. He hailed from Westlock, in northern Alberta, where the UFA had less support. Previously he had been a municipal politician in Alberta and Ontario. He was asked to lead the party, and accepted, becoming Premier of Alberta in 1921. Because he had not run in the 1921 election, he had to enter the legislature through a
by-election . Greenfield's government improved roads, schools and hospitals. It also repealedprohibition , and established the Alberta Liquor Control Board to regulate the sale of alcohol. The government reneged on a promise, however, to establish a government-owned bank that would issue low-interest loans to farmers.Divisions arose between the government and UFA on policy issues. As well, beginning in 1923, Greenfield was often absent due to illness. In November 1925, UFA Members of the
Legislative Assembly approached Brownlee about becoming the new Premier, and Greenfield agreed to resign.[http://greenfield.epsb.ca/ Greenfield School] , an elementary school for Kindergarten to Grade 6 students in south Edmonton, was named for Herbert Greenfield. A painting of Greenfield hangs in the school office.
Early life
Herbert Greenfield was born November 25, 1869, in
Winchester ,England .cite book |last=Jones |first=David C. |editor=Bradford J. Rennie |title=Alberta Premiers of the Twentieth Century |year=2004 |publisher=Canadian Plains Research Center, University of Regina |location=Regina, Saskatchewan |isbn=0-88977-151-0 |pages=60 |chapter=Herbert W. Greenfield ] The son of John Greenfield and Mary Leake, he attended Wesleyan School inDalston ,cite web |url=http://www.assembly.ab.ca/lao/library/premiers/greenfie.htm |title=The Honourable Herbert Greenfield, 1921-25 |publisher=Legislative Assembly of Alberta |accessdate=2008-10-02] but dropped out as a result of his father's bankruptcy. He worked aboard a cattle boat in 1892, before immigrating toCanada in 1896.In Canada, he worked in the oil fields near Sarnia,
Ontario , and as a farmer in Weston. In 1904, Greenfield went west for economic reasons, and homesteaded nearEdmonton . He found work in a lumber mill, and would later turn to farming. His first year in Alberta, a fire destroyed his home, and he and his wife spent the winter in an abandonedsod hut . In 1906, they resettled to a large home four kilometers south of Westlock.While still living in Ontario, Greenfield had married Elizabeth Harris February 28, 1900. The couple would have two sons, Franklin Harris Greenfield and Arnold Leake Greenfield. In 1922, while Greenfield was Premier, Elizabeth died suddenly as a result of routine surgery, devastating him. [Jones 71-72] He remarried in 1926, to Marjorie Greenwood Cormack, who had two children of her own.
Early political career
Herbert Greenfield entered public life on a local level soon after moving to his new farm. He was elected to the local school board, where he spent twelve years, including stints as chair, secretary, and treasurer. He also served as Vice President of the Alberta Educational Association. He served as President of the Westlock Agricultural Society and as co-founder and President of the Alberta Association of Municipal Districts. [cite book |first=Bradford |last=Rennie |title=The Rise of Agrarian Democracy: The United Farmers and Farm Women of Alberta, 1909–1921 |year=2000 |publisher=University of Toronto Press, Incorporated |location=
Toronto ,Ontario |pages=178 |isbn=0-8020-8374-9] He served as an officer of the province-wide Association of Local Improvement Districts, which advocated for such reforms as a change to an eight hour work day (from ten), on the grounds that many LIDs were having trouble competing with railways for labour. [Rennie 72]meeting of the UFA caucus selected Greenfield as its choice, and he took office as Premier August 13, 1921.
Premier
to ask when he might have the chance to speak against. [Jones 69-70] Despite the UFA's nominal majority position (and the four Labour MLAs' generally supportive approach to the government), many votes went against the government.Jones 70]
Agricultural depression
Greenfield became Premier at a time of agricultural depression, especially in the province's south.Jones 61] The region, which was responsible for approximately 75% of Alberta's
wheat production, was in the midst of its fifth consecutive year ofdrought , and the farmers who had been responsible for putting the UFA into office were now demanding action. Initially, the government offered direct financial assistance, with $5 million provided in seed and grain relief by the end of 1922.Jones 63] However, this effort was driving the province close to bankruptcy, and in 1923 Greenfield announced an end to the handouts (the bill authorizing the last of these was the source of chagrin for MLAs from all parties, both because it marked the end of direct assistance for farmers and because the last of the assistance was itself so expensive). Farmers and political representatives from the affected areas criticized the government bitterly, referencing Greenfield's earlier pledge that "if the south country should fall, then we are prepared to fall with it".Jones 62]The government did not give up on addressing the problem when it ended subsidies. It had previously commissioned a number of studies on the agricultural situation and related factors, and converted some of the results of these studies into legislation. The "Debt Adjustment Act" of 1923 was designed to adjust farmers' debts to a level that they could actually pay, thus allowing them to carry on while still ensuring that creditors received as much as was feasible. [Jones 63–64] In the words of
University of Calgary professor David C. Jones, the bill offered "solace, but no real satisfaction".Jones 64]According to Jones, Greenfield's attempts to rescue southern Alberta from agricultural calamity were probably doomed to failure.Jones 65] Even so, Greenfield had called the situation his top priority, and his failure to bring it to a successful resolution cost him politically.
Labour unrest
During Greenfield's premiership, Alberta's major non-agricultural industry was
coal mining , and the industry was not prospering. Production was more than 50% greater than demand, and fewer than half of the province's mines were profitable. The industry as a whole was earning a profit of less than one cent per ton of coal. While miners' wages had more than doubled (in nominal terms) between 1909 and 1920, in the 1920s mine owners began to roll them back.Jones 65-66] Besides wages, miners were unsatisfied with working conditions in an industry that saw more than 3,300 workplace accidents per year. The result was labour militancy...and violence. A general strike in 1920 saw strikers assaultstrikebreakers , throw them off their bicycles, and launch rocks through the windows of buses.Jones 66] When police escorts were called in in aid of the strikebreakers, they were sometimes attacked as well; one constable was partially paralyzed from the beating he received. Provincial police commissioner W.C. Bryan was warned against inspecting one strike site in a note reading "You spoilt the strike, and if you go...you will be killed."Jones 67] He went anyway, and was greeted by an ambush in which three bullets were fired into his car, missing him. [Jones 66-67], who took the side of the miners and objected to the government's provision of police escorts for strikebreakers. Though the problems originated before Greenfield took office, many Albertans felt that a stronger leader might have been more successful than Greenfield in appealing for peace.
Prohibition
Prohibition had been introduced in Alberta following a 1916 referendum, during which the UFA had advocated for the prohibitionist side. [cite book |last=Jaques |first=Carrol |editor=Bradford J. Rennie |title=Alberta Premiers of the Twentieth Century |year=2004 |publisher=Canadian Plains Research Center, University of Regina |location=
Regina, Saskatchewan |isbn=0-88977-151-0 |pages=49 |chapter=Charles Stewart ] By 1920, however, it was becoming apparent that the policy was not working (or, as theMedicine Hat News noted, "Prohibition is now working smoothly. The only thing left is to stop the sale of liquor!"). Greenfield's own MLAs began to grumble about the policy -Archibald Matheson expressed in 1923 the view that "This government has acted as philosopher, guide, and God to the people long enough."Jones 68] The government resolved to repeal the "Prohibition Act", a move that Greenfield attempted to make more palatable by proposing that liquor profits be shared with impoverished municipalities. However, the scheme proved unworkable, and the re-legalization went ahead without any such profit-sharing.References
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