- Byron Ingemar Johnson
Infobox_President
name = Byron Ingemar "Boss" Johnson
caption = Byron I. Johnson
order = 24thPremier of British Columbia
term_start =December 29 ,1947
term_end =August 1 ,1952
predecessor = John Hart
successor =W. A. C. Bennett
birth_date = birth date|1890|12|10|mf=y
birth_place =Victoria, British Columbia
death_date = death date and age | 1964|01|12|1890|12|10
death_place =Victoria, British Columbia
party = Coalition government ofBritish Columbia Liberal Party andBritish Columbia Conservative Party
spouse = Kate Johnson
religion = United Church|Byron Ingemar Johnson (
December 10 ,1890 -January 12 ,1964 ) served as the 24th Premier of the province ofBritish Columbia ,Canada , from 1947 to 1952. To his contemporaries he was often referred to by his nickname, "Boss" Johnson, which had nothing to do with his personality, but was ananglicization of the Icelandic "Bjosse", which is a diminutive form of his birth-name of Bjorn, which was adapted into English as Byron.Early Years
Johnson was born and raised in
Victoria, British Columbia . After overseas service inWorld War I , he and his brothers opened a building supplies business in Victoria, which proved to be successful. Johnson was first elected as one of four Members of the Legislative Assembly from Victoria City to the BC Legislature as a Liberal in the 1933 election. He served four years in thecaucus of Premier Duff Pattullo before being defeated in the 1937 election.Johnson returned to his business, and in
World War II was put in charge of constructingRoyal Canadian Air Force facilities throughout the province. In the 1945 election, he returned to the legislature, this time as the member for New Westminster, becoming acabinet minister in thecoalition government formed by the Liberal and Conservative parties, and led by Premier John Hart. Following Hart's resignation in 1947, Johnson succeeded him as Liberal leader and as the leader of the Coalition, and therefore also as Premier.Johnson as Premier
Johnson's government introduced compulsory
health insurance -- and to pay for it -- a 3% provincialsales tax . It expanded the highway system, extended thePacific Great Eastern Railway, and negotiated theAlcan Agreement, which facilitated construction of theKenney Dam , the first major hydroelectric project in the province. The government also coped with the devastating 1948 flooding of theFraser River , declaring astate of emergency and beginning a programme of diking the river's banks through theFraser Valley . Johnson is also noted for appointingNancy Hodges as the first female Speaker in the British Commonwealth.A Liberal-Conservative Coalition government, with the Liberals led by Johnson and the Conservatives led by
Royal Lethington Maitland , won a landslide victory in the 1949 election -- at 61% the greatest percentage of the popular vote in BC history. Although Maitland's caucus was crucial to the government's parliamentary mandate, the larger Liberal caucus earned Johnson the Premier's job. After the Conservatives withdrew from the coalition in 1951, Johnson's government collapsed. In the subsequent 1952 election, the Liberals were defeated byW.A.C. Bennett 's Social Credit Party, and Johnson lost his own seat. With the defeat, the long history of formal coalition government between the Liberal and Conservative parties in British Columbia came to an end, and a new era of a two-party system (CCF/NDP versus Social Credit) emerged.Johnson returned to private life, and died in Victoria in 1964, aged 73 years. He is interred in the city's
Ross Bay Cemetery .External links
* [http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=6374 Byron Ingemar Johnson on Find-A-Grave]
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