- Joseph-Goderic Blanchet
Joseph-Goderic (Joseph-Godric) Blanchet, PC (
June 7 1829 –January 1 1890 ) was a Canadian physician and politician. He was the only person to serve as bothSpeaker of the Canadian House of Commons and Speaker of a provinciallegislature . He represented Lévis in theCanadian House of Commons as aLiberal-Conservative member from 1867 to 1873 and from 1879 to 1883; he represented Bellechasse from 1875 to 1878. He also represented Lévis in theLegislative Assembly of Quebec from 1867 to 1875.He was born in Saint-Pierre-de-la-Rivière-du-Sud,
Lower Canada in 1825. He studied at thePetit Séminaire de Québec andCollège de Sainte-Anne-de-la-Pocatière . He then studied medicine with his uncle Jean Blanchet and qualified as a doctor in 1850. A popularphysician , Blanchet entered politics with his election asMayor of Notre-Dame-de-la-Victoire, now part of LévisQuebec (thenCanada East ) in 1845 at the age of 25. With theProvince of Canada on military alert due to theAmerican Civil War , Blanchet joined themilitia and raised a battalion to defend the frontier against raids from theUnited States . During theFenian Raid s of 1866 and 1870, he was in command of the militia on the south shore of theSt. Lawrence River .Blanchet was a Conservative and first ran for election to the Legislative Assembly in 1857 but was defeated. He was elected to the Legislative Assembly for Lévis in 1861 and 1863. He supported
Canadian Confederation as a means of defendingBritish North America against possible attack by theUnited States .He was concurrently elected in the 1867 federal election to the new
Canadian House of Commons and to the Quebec Legislative Assembly. Under the law of the day, he was allowed to be a member of both legislatures at the same time.He became Speaker of the provincial legislature and served in that position for two terms.
In the federal House of Commons, he was named by Prime Minister Sir
John A. Macdonald to a committee investigating thePacific Scandal .The federal election law was changed in 1874 to prohibit Members of Parliament (MPs) from concurrently sitting in a provincial legislature. Blanchet chose to resign his seat in the federal House of Commons. After losing his seat in the Quebec legislature to the much younger
Étienne-Théodore Pâquet in the 1875 Quebec provincial election, he won a federalby-election in 1875 and returned to Ottawa as MP for Bellechasse. In the 1878 federal election, he ran in his old riding of Lévis. The election returned the Conservatives to power, and Macdonald nominated Blanchet to be Speaker of the House of Commons.Due to the tradition of alternating between English and French Speakers after each election, he returned to the
backbench es following the 1882 election despite a successful term as Speaker. In 1883, he resigned from Parliament in order to accept a position as Collector of Customs for the Port of Quebec and served in that position until his death at Lévis in 1890 at the age of 70. He was buried in the crypt of Notre-Dame Church of Lévis.References
*DictCanbio|ID=5379
*CanParlbio|ID=c3bc9eeb-4b21-44c8-816a-787dddd8f7f5
* [http://www.assnat.qc.ca/fra/membres/notices/b/Blanjg.htm Biography from Assemblée nationale du Québec] fr icon###@@@KEY@@@###succession box
before=Télesphore Fournier
title=Member of Parliament from Bellechasse
years=1875 – 1878
after=Achille Larue succession box
before=Louis-Honoré Fréchette
title=Member of Parliament from Lévis
years=1878 – 1883
after=Isidore-Noël Belleau s-ttl|title=Member of the Legislative Assembly from Lévis
years=1867 – 1875s-ttl
title=Speaker of the Legislative Assembly of Quebec| years=1867-12-27 –1875-11-04
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