John Thompson (politician)

John Thompson (politician)

Infobox Prime Minister
honorific-prefix=The Right Honourable

name=Sir John Sparrow David Thompson
honorific-suffix=
KCMG, PC, QC


order =4th
office =Prime Minister of Canada
term_start =December 5, 1892
term_end =December 12, 1894
monarch =Queen Victoria
predecessor =John Abbott
successor =Mackenzie Bowell
birth_date =birth date|1845|11|10|mf=y
birth_place =Halifax, Nova Scotia
death_date =death date and age|1894|12|12|1845|11|10
death_place =Windsor Castle, England
party =Conservative
religion =Methodist, then Roman Catholic
children = 9
alma_mater = none (articled with lawyer in Halifax, Nova Scotia)
occupation =
profession = Lawyer

Sir John Sparrow David Thompson, KCMG, PC, QC, (November 10, 1845December 12, 1894) was a Canadian lawyer, judge, politician, and university professor, who served as the fourth Prime Minister of Canada from December 5, 1892 to December 12, 1894, as well as Premier of Nova Scotia in 1882. He was the first Roman Catholic to hold the office of prime minister.

Early years

Born in Halifax, Nova Scotia to John Sparrow Thompson and Charlotte Pottinger, he was of Irish descent. Thompson married Annie Affleck (1845-1913) in 1870, and with her had two sons and three daughters, with four other children not surviving infancy. Annie Thompson was strong-willed and had the same kind of spirit that had driven Agnes Macdonald to ride the cowcatcher of the CPR train through the British Columbia mountains. During their courtship, Thompson was forced to write love letters in shorthand due to his soon to be wife's disapproving parents. Thompson's family life was marred by tragedy. His daughter Annie died at one year of age, while youngest son David lived to be two. Two of Thompson's other children died at birth (the Thompsons had five children survive childhood).

Enters provincial government, judge

Thompson was called to the Nova Scotia Bar in July 1865, and from 1878 to 1882 served as Attorney General in the provincial government of Simon H. Holmes. He briefly held the office of Nova Scotia premier in 1882, but his government was defeated in that year's election. Thompson was always a reluctant politician.

After his resignation from government, Thompson was immediately appointed to the Supreme Court of Nova Scotia by the Prime Minister of Canada, Sir John A. Macdonald. In this role, he was instrumental in founding the Dalhousie Law School in 1883. He taught law courses at Dalhousie in its early years.

Minister of Justice

After several failed overtures, Sir John A. Macdonald finally recruited Thompson to Ottawa in 1885. Macdonald generally thought highly of him, remarking, "My one great discovery was my discovery of Thompson." Macdonald poked some fun at his recruit as well: "Thompson is a little too fond of satire, and a little too much of a Nova Scotian." ["Mr. Prime Minister 1867-1964", by Bruce Hutchison, Toronto 1964, Longmans Canada.]

Thompson was sworn in as Minister of Justice in September 1885, and subsequently won a seat in Parliament representing Antigonish in October 1885. When he returned to Ottawa, the Riel crisis was in full swing. What to do with Louis Riel, who'd been sentenced to hang for leading the 1885 North-West Rebellion, was now the responsibility of Thompson as the new minister of justice. Although he was ill with kidney stones at the time of Riel's execution, Thompson made his first major speech to Parliament during the subsequent debate, arguing that anyone who encouraged aboriginal Canadians to act against the state could not escape justice. This speech was notable, and helped to popularize Thompson, and he quickly rose to become a leading member of the Conservative government.

Thompson's achievements as Minister of Justice included the first Criminal Code of Canada. His rise in government is probably due as much to the influence of Lady Ishbel Aberdeen, the wife of the Governor General, as to Macdonald's mentoring. Lady Aberdeen had great admiration for Thompson, and wrote frequently about him in her published "Canadian Journal". ["The Man From Halifax: Sir John Thompson, Prime Minister", by Peter Busby Waite, Toronto 1985, University of Toronto Press, p. 527.]

Declines leadership

When Sir John A. Macdonald fell ill, Thompson was the last minister to see him before the Prime Minister's devastating stroke in May 1891. Following Macdonald’s death a week later, there was a cabinet crisis. Governor General Lord Stanley of Preston finally called on Thompson to form a government, but Thompson declined. Religious prejudice against the Roman Catholic Thompson, having converted at his marriage, made this course of action politically untenable, and Thompson recommended John Abbott, who ultimately accepted.

Prime Ministership

Thompson assumed office of Prime Minister when Abbott retired in 1892. He came very close to bringing Newfoundland into Confederation; this would not be achieved until 1949.

His first major speech as PM was given in Toronto in January 1893, covering the topics of tolerance and Canadian nationalism in conjunction with loyalty to the British crown. At the time, Thompson was concerned about the possibility of the annexation of Canada by the United States, a goal which was being pursued within Canada by the Continental Union Association, a group of Ontario and Quebec Liberals. Despite his concern, Thompson ultimately realized that the conspiracy to make Canada part of the United States was confined to a small and noisy minority within the opposition party.

In March 1893, Thompson travelled to Paris, France as one of the judges on the tribunal to settle the Canada-US dispute over the seal harvest in the Bering Sea. The result was a victory for Thompson as the tribunal ruled there was no justification for the United States' claim that the Bering Sea was closed to all but American seal hunters.

Other matters of concern during Thompson's Prime Ministership included the reduction of trade tariffs, and questions over schooling in Manitoba and in the North West Territories, where disputes over the role of Catholics and Protestants in administering the school system existed. Ultimately, the North West school problem was resolved to Thompson’s liking, but the Prime Minister would not live to see a similar resolution to the Manitoba matter.

udden death

Sir John Thompson had been Prime Minister of Canada for only two years when he died suddenly from a heart attack at the age of 49 on December 12, 1894, at Windsor Castle, where Queen Victoria had just made him a member of her Privy Council. Thompson's physical condition had deteriorated during his time in Ottawa; he was significantly overweight when he died; at 5 ft 7 ins, he weighed about 225 pounds, and had always pushed himself very hard with work.

Thompson was the second of two Canadian prime ministers to die in office (the first was Sir John A. Macdonald), and the first of three who did not die in Canada. (The other two were Sir Charles Tupper and Richard Bedford Bennett.)

He was buried on January 3, 1895 in the Holy Cross Cemetery, Halifax, Nova Scotia after an elaborate funeral in England staged by Queen Victoria. Despite having held Prime Ministerial office, Thompson left few means, and Parliament set up a fund to support his widow and children. His only remaining descendant today is Ann Mitchell.

Legacy

Thompson's death while prime minister at the age of only 49 threw the Conservative Party into disarray, as the ruling party had no one of comparable ability to take over the rest of his unfinished term, nor did they have potential talent on its way up. By 1896, following short terms from prime ministers Mackenzie Bowell and Sir Charles Tupper, the Conservatives lost the next federal election to the Liberals, who began a run of power which would see them form the national government for 67 of the next 88 years. The Conservatives had ruled Canada for 24 of the 29 years following Confederation in 1867.

Thompson's pioneering work as Minister of Justice with the first Criminal Code of Canada brought much-needed order to a confused field. His efforts in founding Dalhousie University Law School, the first in the region, helped professionalize legal education in Atlantic Canada. Dalhousie Law has had a high reputation ever since. By winning the Bering Sea fishery dispute against the United States, Thompson showed that Canada would not be pushed around by bigger powers on the international front.

Thompson's collected papers were donated in 1949 to the National Archives of Canada by his son, Colonel John Thompson. ["The Man From Halifax: Sir John Thompson, Prime Minister", by Peter Busby Waite, Toronto 1985, University of Toronto press, pp. vii-ix.]

upreme Court Appointments

Thompson chose the following jurists to sit as justices of the Supreme Court of Canada:
* Sir Samuel Henry Strong (as Chief Justice, December 13, 1892November 18, 1902; appointed a Puisne Justice under Prime Minister Mackenzie, September 30, 1875)
* Robert Sedgewick - (February 18, 1893August 4, 1906)
* George Edwin King - (September 21, 1893May 8, 1901)

References

Further reading

* "Life and Work of the Rt. Hon. Sir John Thompson", by J. Castell Hopkins, Toronto 1895, United Publishing Houses.

* "Sir John Thompson", J.P. Heisler, thesis, University of Toronto, 1955.

* "The Canadian Journal of Lady Aberdeen, 1893-1898", by Lady Aberdeen, edited by John Saywell, Champlain Society, 1960.

* "Mr. Prime Minister 1867-1964", by Bruce Hutchison, Toronto 1964, Longmans Canada.

* "A History of the Conservative Administrations, 1891-1896", by Lovell Clark, PhD thesis, University of Toronto, 1968.

* "The Man from Halifax: Sir John Thompson, prime minister", by Peter Busby Waite, Toronto 1985, University of Toronto Press, ISBN 0-8020-5659-8.

* "Right Honourable Men: The Descent of Canadian Politics from Macdonald to Mulroney", by Michael Bliss, Toronto 1994.

External links

* [http://www.biographi.ca/009004-119.01-e.php?&id_nbr=6462 Biography at the "Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online"]
* [http://www.parl.gc.ca/information/about/people/key/bio.asp?lang=E&query=1873&s=M Political Biography from the Library of Parliament]
* [http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=2554 John Thompson's Gravesite]
* [http://www.holycrosscemeteryhalifax.ca/ Holy Cross Cemetery]

Persondata
NAME=Thompson, John Sparrow David
ALTERNATIVE NAMES=
SHORT DESCRIPTION=4th Prime Minister of Canada (1892-1894)
DATE OF BIRTH= [November 10, 1845
PLACE OF BIRTH=Halifax
DATE OF DEATH=death date|1894|12|12|mf=y
PLACE OF DEATH=Windsor Castle in Windsor, Berkshire


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