- Alexander Morris
Alexander Morris, PC (
March 17 ,1826 –October 28 ,1889 ) was a Canadian politician. He served in the cabinet ofPrime Minister John A. Macdonald (1869-1872), and was the secondLieutenant Governor ofManitoba (1872-1877). He also served as the firstLieutenant Governor of theDistrict of Keewatin .ref|keegovMorris was born in Perth,
Upper Canada (nowOntario ), the son of William Morris, himself a prominent Canadian businessman and Conservative politician. From this privileged social position, Morris was educated in Canada andScotland and worked for three years at theMontreal firm of Thorne and Heward. In 1847, he moved toKingston, Ontario and articled for a year under John A. Macdonald. In 1849, he became the first person to receive an arts degree fromMcGill University . He would subsequently receive other degrees from McGill, including a DCL in 1862. In 1851, he was admitted to the bar in bothCanada East andCanada West ; he subsequently built up a profitable legal practice.Morris was also an author, and in 1855 published an essay entitled "Canada and her resources", which called for the development of national industry. In 1858, he predicted a coming federation of the British North American colonies in a work entitled "Nova Britannia", which sold 3,000 copies in its first ten days of publication. He also wrote on academic matters and developments in the
Presbyterian Church in Canada, of which he was a prominent member (becoming a ruling elder of itssynod in the 1850s).Alexander Morris was raised for public life, and it was no surprise when he declared himself a candidate for the
Province of Canada 's legislature in 1861. He ran as a Liberal-Conservative in the riding ofLanark South in Canada West, supporting the government ofGeorge-Étienne Cartier and John A. Macdonald. Morris received 1265 votes, against 828 for his opponent. The Cartier-Macdonald government came out of the 1861 election in a weakened position, and LiberalJohn Sandfield Macdonald was able to form a ministry in 1862. Morris, accordingly, went into the opposition. He was easily re-elected in 1863, and returned to the government side when theÉtienne-Paschal Taché -John A. Macdonald ministry was formed in 1864.Morris's role in parliament was limited during these years, though he spoke frequently in support of confederation and played a role in negotiating the grand coalition ministry of 1864. He also expanded his business interests in this period, and was named to the board of the
Commercial Bank of Canada in 1867. During his time in parliament, he was responsible for introducing a bill ending public executions in Canada.Morris was re-elected by acclamation in the federal election of 1867, the first to be held following the royal proclamation of Confederation. He was appointed
Minister of Inland Revenue onNovember 16 ,1869 , and served as a competent if not prominent member of the Macdonald ministry for the next three years. On the advice of his doctors, he did not seek re-election in 1872.He was instead appointed as the first Chief Justice of
Manitoba , serving in this position from July to December 1872. He was also appointed as the acting Lieutenant Governor of Manitoba and theNorthwest Territories in October 1872, following the departure ofAdams George Archibald . Morris maintained Archibald's policy of conciliation among the various factions in Manitoba, and unsuccessfully attempted to establish a local police force to preserve law and order in the region. He was formally sworn in as the official Lieutenant Governor onDecember 2 , and attempted to accelerate the settling of Métis land claims in the province.Manitoba's government was still in a developing state when Morris became Lieutenant Governor, and he continued Archibald's practice of serving as the province's "de facto"
Premier . In 1873, he refused a request byHenry Joseph Clarke to be recognized as Premier of the province, and continued to exercise his own authority over the province's legislative process.After the defeat of the provincial ministry in July 1874, Morris asked
Marc-Amable Girard to become the province's first Premier, thereby instituting responsible government to the province. Even after this, he continued to exert considerable authority from behind the scenes.Morris spoke for Manitoba on matters of federal-provincial relations, and helped to create the
University of Manitoba in 1877. He was also actively involved in treaty negotiations with aboriginal groups, signing Treaties 3, 4, 5, and 6, and revising Treaties 1 and 2. Morris seems to have been more willing to support aboriginal land title than was his predecessor Archibald, and argued in favour of education and hunting/fishing rights for aboriginal groups. Despite some successes, however, he was unable to prevent the withdrawal of many Métis from the province (there were some suspicions about Morris's own speculation in land previously owned by the Métis).Morris stepped down as Lieutenant Governor of the Northwest Territories in 1876, after it was made a separate jurisdiction. While losing this position, he also gained the Lieutenant Governorship of
Keewatin District , a new territory which stretched up into theArctic . He held this position until 1877, when he resigned as Lieutenant Governor of Manitoba and returned toOntario .Morris sought to return to the federal House of Commons in 1878. After losing the Conservative nomination in the Manitoba riding of Marquette, he decided to contest nearby Selkirk instead. He was defeated by
Canadian Pacific Railway spokesman and Independent ConservativeDonald A. Smith by 555 votes to 546, and subsequently returned to Ontario again.Later in 1878, Ontario MLA
Matthew Crooks Cameron was appointed as a judge, and the provincial seat ofToronto East became vacant. Morris contested the riding as a Conservative, and defeated his Liberal opponent J. Leys by 1891 votes to 1846. The Conservatives were in opposition to the Liberal government ofOliver Mowat in this period, and Morris served as the opposition house leader. In the general election of 1879, he personally defeated Mowat in Toronto East by 2132 votes to 2075 (though it should be noted that Mowat also contested Oxford North, which he won easily). Morris again defeated Leys by a narrow margin in 1883, but did not seek re-election in 1886, once more for medical reasons. The Conservatives were never able to form government in Ontario during Morris's time in the provincial house.Morris continued to serve as a prominent figure in the Presbyterian Church following his retirement. He died in 1889, at age 63.
References
# [http://books.google.ca/books?vid=LCCN02010621&id=Vn5IbZkax2YC&q=%22District+of+Keewatin%22&dq=%22District+of+Keewatin%22&num=100&pgis=1 Alexander Morris becomes Lieutenant Governor of District of Keewatin]
External links
*gutenberg author|id=Alexander_Morris|name=Alexander Morris
*DictCanbio|ID=5720
*Parlbio|ID=2453
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