13th Quebec Legislature
The 13th Legislative Assembly of Quebec was the provincial legislature in Quebec, Canada that existed from May 15, 1912, to May 22, 1916. The Quebec Liberal Party led by Lomer Gouin was the governing party.
Seats per political party
- After the 1912 elections
Affiliation | Members | |
---|---|---|
Liberal | 62 | |
Conservative | 16 | |
Liberal Independent | 1 | |
Parti ouvrier | 1 | |
Ligue nationaliste canadienne | 1 | |
Total | 81 | |
Government Majority | 46 |
Member list
This was the list of members of the Legislative Assembly of Quebec that were elected in the 1912 election:
Name | Party | Riding | |
---|---|---|---|
Harry Slater | Conservative | Argenteuil | |
Paul Tourigny | Liberal | Arthabaska | |
Frédéric-Hector Daigneault | Liberal | Bagot | |
Arthur Godbout | Liberal | Beauce | |
Edmond Arthur Robert | Liberal | Beauharnois | |
Antonin Galipeault | Liberal | Bellechasse | |
Joseph-Olivier Gadoury | Conservative | Berthier | |
John Hall Kelly | Liberal | Bonaventure | |
William Frederick Vilas | Liberal | Brome | |
Eugène Merril Lesieur Desaulniers | Liberal | Chambly | |
Joseph-Arthur Labissonnière | Conservative | Champlain | |
Pierre D'Auteuil | Conservative | Charlevoix et Saguenay | |
Honoré Mercier Jr. | Liberal | Châteauguay | |
Honoré Petit | Liberal | Chicoutimi | |
George Nathaniel Scott | Liberal | Compton | |
Arthur Sauvé | Conservative | Deux-Montagnes | |
Alfred Morissett | Liberal | Dorchester | |
Jules Allard | Liberal | Drummond | |
Georges-Stanislas Grégoire | Liberal | Frontenac | |
Gustave Lemieux | Liberal | Gaspé | |
William H. Walker | Liberal | Huntingdon | |
Joseph-Aldéric Benoît | Liberal | Iberville | |
Joseph-Édouard Caron | Liberal | Îles-de-la-Madeleine | |
Philémon Cousineau | Conservative | Jacques-Cartier | |
Joseph-Mathias Tellier | Conservative | Joliette | |
Charles-Adolphe Stein | Liberal | Kamouraska | |
Hyacinthe-Adélard Fortier | Liberal | Labelle | |
Jean-Baptiste Carbonneau | Liberal | Lac-Saint-Jean | |
Ésioff-Léon Patenaude | Conservative | Laprairie | |
Walter Reed | Liberal | L'Assomption | |
Joseph-Wenceslas Lévesque | Liberal | Laval | |
Alphonse Bernier | Conservative | Lévis | |
Joseph-Octave Morin | Conservative | L'Islet | |
Joseph-Napoléon Francoeur | Liberal | Lotbinière | |
Jérémie-Louis Décarie | Liberal | Maisonneuve | |
Rodolphe Tourville | Liberal | Maskinongé | |
Donat Caron | Liberal | Matane | |
Joseph Demers | Liberal | Mégantic | |
Joseph-Jean-Baptiste Gosselin | Liberal | Missisquoi | |
Joseph Sylvestre | Conservative | Montcalm | |
Armand Lavergne | Ligue nationaliste canadienne | Montmagny | |
Louis-Alexandre Taschereau | Liberal | Montmorency | |
Georges Mayrand | Liberal | Montréal-Dorion | |
Séverin Létourneau | Liberal | Montréal-Hochelaga | |
Napoléon Turcot | Liberal | Montréal-Laurier | |
Denis Tansey | Conservative | Montréal–Sainte-Anne | |
Napoléon Séguin | Liberal | Montréal–Sainte-Marie | |
Charles Ernest Gault | Conservative | Montréal–Saint-Georges | |
Clément Robillard | Liberal | Montréal–Saint-Jacques | |
John Thomas Finnie | Liberal | Montréal–Saint-Laurent | |
Godfroy Langlois | Liberal | Montréal–Saint-Louis | |
Cyprien Doris | Liberal | Napierville | |
Charles Ramsay Devlin | Liberal | Nicolet | |
Ferdinand-Ambroise Gendron | Liberal | Ottawa | |
George Benjamin Campbell | Conservative | Pontiac | |
Lomer Gouin | Liberal | Portneuf | |
Cyrille Fraser Delage | Liberal | Québec-Comté | |
Eugène Leclerc | Liberal | Québec-Centre | |
Louis-Alfred Létourneau | Liberal | Québec-Est | |
John Charles Kaine | Liberal | Québec-Ouest | |
Maurice-Louis Péloquin | Liberal | Richelieu | |
Peter Samuel George Mackenzie | Liberal | Richmond | |
Auguste-Maurice Tessier | Liberal | Rimouski | |
Joseph-Edmond Robert | Liberal | Rouville | |
Télesphore-Damien Bouchard | Liberal | Saint-Hyacinthe | |
Lomer Gouin | Liberal | Saint-Jean | |
Georges-Isidore Delisle | Liberal | Saint-Maurice | |
Joseph-Alphonse Langlois | Parti ouvrier | Saint-Sauveur | |
William Stephen Bullock | Liberal | Shefford | |
Calixte-Émile Therrien | Liberal | Sherbrooke | |
Joseph-Octave Mousseau | Liberal | Soulanges | |
Prosper-Alfred Bissonnet | Liberal | Stanstead | |
Charles Ramsay Devlin | Liberal | Témiscaming | |
Léo Bérubé | Conservative | Témiscouata | |
Jean Prévost | Liberal Independent | Terrebonne | |
Joseph-Adolphe Tessier | Liberal | Trois-Rivières | |
Hormisdas Pilon | Liberal | Vaudreuil | |
Amédée Geoffrion | Liberal | Verchères | |
Charles Allan Smart | Conservative | Westmount | |
Napoléon-Pierre Tanguay | Liberal | Wolfe | |
Guillaume-Édouard Ouellette | Liberal | Yamaska |
Other elected MLAs
- Joseph-Léonide Perron, Quebec Liberal Party, Verchères, October 16, 1912 [1]
- Joseph-Émery Phaneuf, Quebec Liberal Party, Bagot, January 16, 1913 [2]
- Alfred-Joseph Bissonnett, Quebec Liberal Party, Stanstead, January 16, 1913 [3]
- Lucien Cannon, Quebec Liberal Party, Dorchester, June 2, 1913 [4]
- Arthur Trahan, Quebec Liberal Party, Nicolet, June 2, 1913 [5]
- Andrew Philps, Quebec Liberal Party, Huntingdon, November 10, 1913 [6]
- Marcellin Robert, Quebec Liberal Party, St. Jean, November 10, 1913 [7]
- Joseph-Fabien Bugeaud, Quebec Liberal Party, Bonaventure, May 7, 1914 [8]
- Walter George Mitchell, Quebec Liberal Party, Richmond, November 21, 1914 [9]
Cabinet Ministers
- Prime Minister and Executive Council President: Lomer Gouin
- Agriculture: Joseph-Édouard Caron
- Colonisation, Mines and Fishing: Charles Devlin Ramsey (1912-1914), Honoré Mercier Jr. (1914-1916)
- Public Works and Labor: Louis-Alexandre Taschereau
- Lands and Forests: Jules Allard
- Roads: Joseph-Édouard Caron (1912-1914), Joseph-Adolphe Tessier (1914-1916)
- Attorney General:Lomer Gouin
- Provincial secretary: Louis-Jérémie Décarie
- Treasurer: Peter Samuel George MacKenzie (1912-1914), Walter Georges Mitchell (1914-1916)
References
- 1912 election results
- List of historical Cabinet Ministers
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- t
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Legislatures of Quebec
- 1st (1867–1871)
- 2nd (1871–1875)
- 3rd (1875–1878)
- 4th (1878–1881)
- 5th (1881–1886)
- 6th (1886–1890)
- 7th (1890–1892)
- 8th (1892–1897)
- 9th (1897–1900)
- 10th (1900–1904)
- 11th (1904–1908)
- 12th (1908–1912)
- 13th (1912–1916)
- 14th (1916–1919)
- 15th (1919–1923)
- 16th (1923–1927)
- 17th (1927–1931)
- 18th (1931–1935)
- 19th (1935–1936)
- 20th (1936–1939)
- 21st (1939–1944)
- 22nd (1944–1948)
- 23rd (1948–1952)
- 24th (1952–1956)
- 25th (1956–1960)
- 26th (1960–1962)
- 27th (1962–1966)
- 28th (1966–1968)