- Alexander Bannerman
:"For the pioneer aviator, see
Sir Alexander Bannerman, 11th Baronet ."Sir Alexander Bannerman (7 October 1788 – 30 December 1864) was a merchant,vintner and colonialgovernor .Bannerman, known as "Sandy", was a prominent businessman in his hometown of
Aberdeen, Scotland managing the familywine business as well as having a hand in trading andwhaling . In 1832 he becameMember of Parliament (MP) for Aberdeen in theBritish House of Commons , sitting as a Radical, and remained an MP until his retirement in 1847.In 1825 he married
Margaret Gordon , who was later identified as "Carlyle's first love" by her biographer, who tells of the young schoolmasterThomas Carlyle , inKirkcaldy , Scotland, "who was attracted by her intelligence and wit." Her family considered Carlyle as an unsuitable marriage prospect, and she eventually married Bannerman, a distant cousin.¹Margaret Gordon, Lady Bannerman was born in
Charlottetown , P.E.I., a granddaughter ofWalter Patterson who had been the Island's first governor.¹ The couple returned to the colony of her birth, when Alexander Bannerman took up the appointment in 1851 as governor of Prince Edward Island. He institutedresponsible government there but was removed in 1854 due to political unrest in which he favoured the Reformers and became governor of the Bahamas. Bannerman returned north to become governor of Newfoundland from 1857 to 1864, the second governor since responsible government had been granted.He clashed with John Kent, the premier of Newfoundland, whom he felt was corrupt. Bannerman accused Kent's government, as did Bishop Mullock, of using relief aid as patronage, and also accused Kent of being unreasonable in negotiations with
France over theFrench Shore . In 1861, after Kent accused Bannerman of conspiring with the courts and oppositionConservative Party of Newfoundland against a proposal to reduce the salaries of judges, Bannerman dismissed the Kent government and appointed the leader of the opposition,Hugh Hoyles as the new Premier.Kent's
Liberal Party of Newfoundland defeated the Conservative government in aMotion of No Confidence resulting in an election campaign that was fought alongsectarian lines with Catholics largely voting Liberal and Protestants largely voting Conservative. The ProtestantConservative Party of Newfoundland narrowly defeated Kent's Liberals. Extensive rioting led to disputed results, with the Conservatives having a majority of only two until in a peaceful by-election Harbour Grace returned two Conservatives. Bannerman' initial action in dismissing Kent had been rash and the Colonial Office told him so, but Hoyles, the new Premier, moved towards non-sectarian government, both bishops called for order, and the politics of class replaced the politics of religion.Bannerman resigned as governor in 1864 and returned to England where he caught a cold and, in his enfeebled state, fell down a flight of stairs causing his death on December 30.
Bannerman Park in St. John's commemorates his name in Newfoundland.¹Carlyle's First Love: Margaret Gordon Lady Bannerman, by Raymond C. Archibald, London, John Lane the Bodley Head, 1910
External links
* [http://www.gov.pe.ca/lg/gallery/11Bannerman.php3 Biography at Prince Edward Island Government official website]
* [http://www.heritage.nf.ca/govhouse/governors/g48.html Biography at Government House "The Governorship of Newfoundland and Labrador"]
* [http://www.biographi.ca/009004-119.01-e.php?&id_nbr=4280 Biography at the "Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online"]succession box|title=Governor of Prince Edward Island
before=Ambrose Lane
after=Dominick Daly
years=1851–1854succession box|title=Governor of the Bahamas
before=John Gregory
after=Charles John Bayley
years=1854–1857succession box|title=Governor of Newfoundland
before=Sir Charles Henry Darling
after=Sir Anthony Musgrave
years=1857–1864
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