- John Hart (Canadian politician)
Infobox_President
name = John Hart
caption = Hon. John Hart
order = 23rdPremier of British Columbia
term_start =December 9 1941
term_end =December 29 ,1947
predecessor =Thomas Dufferin Pattullo
successor =Byron Ingemar Johnson
birth_date = birth date|1879|3|31|mf=y
birth_place =Mohill ,County Leitrim ,Ireland
death_date = death date and age |1957|04|07|1879|03|31
death_place =Victoria, British Columbia
party =British Columbia Liberal Party
spouse = Harriett (Mackay)
religion = Catholic|John Hart (
Mohill ,County Leitrim ,Ireland March 31 ,1879 –April 7 ,1957 ,Victoria, British Columbia ) was premier ofBritish Columbia ,Canada , fromDecember 9 1941 toDecember 29 1947 .Hart worked in the finance industry and founded his own firm in 1909. He entered politics in the 1916 election, elected to the provincial legislature as a Liberal member from Victoria City. He served as minister of finance from 1917 to 1924, and from 1933 to 1947.
Hart became
premier following the 1941 election when Pattullo's Liberals failed to win a majority. Unlike Pattullo, Hart was willing to form acoalition government with the Conservative Party. This allowed the Liberal-Conservative coalition to govern with a majority, and to block the rise of thesocialist Cooperative Commonwealth Federation.From 1941 to 1945, Hart governed at a time of wartime scarcity, when all major government projects were postponed. Hart's coalition government was re-elected in the 1945 election by a decisive margin. In that contest, Liberals and Conservatives ran under the same banner for the first time in BC history.
After 1945, Hart undertook an ambitious program of rural electrification, hydroelectric and highway construction. Hart's most significant projects were the construction of Highway 97 to northern British Columbia (which is named in his honour) and the re-launch of the
Bridge River Power Project , which was the first major hydroelectric development in British Columbia. He established the BC Power Commission, a forerunner ofBC Hydro , to provide power to smaller communities that were not serviced by private utilities.In December 1947, he retired as both finance minister and premier, and returned to business.
Hart was one of the few BC premiers who left office neither defeated nor under a cloud. He died in Victoria in 1957, aged 78 years, having led a distinguished life of public service. He is interred in the city's Royal Oak Cemetery.
The 405 km John Hart Highway, between Prince George and Dawson Creek, is named for him.
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