15th Quebec Legislature
The 15th Legislative Assembly of Quebec is the provincial legislature in Quebec, Canada that existed from June 23, 1919, to February 5, 1923. The Quebec Liberal Party led by Lomer Gouin and Louis-Alexandre Taschereau was the governing party. Taschereau succeeded Gouin in 1920 as Premier of Quebec.
Seats per political party
- After the 1919 elections
Affiliation | Members | |
---|---|---|
Liberal | 74 | |
Conservative | 5 | |
Parti ouvrier | 2 | |
Total | 81 | |
Government Majority | 69 |
Member list
This was the list of members of the Legislative Assembly of Quebec that were elected in the 1919 election:
Name | Party | Riding | |
---|---|---|---|
John Hay | Liberal | Argenteuil | |
Joseph-Édouard Perrault | Liberal | Arthabaska | |
Joseph-Émery Phaneuf | Liberal | Bagot | |
Arthur Godbout | Liberal | Beauce | |
Achille Bergevin | Liberal | Beauharnois | |
Antonin Galipeault | Liberal | Bellechasse | |
Siméon Lafrenière | Liberal | Berthier | |
Joseph-Fabien Bugeaud | Liberal | Bonaventure | |
William Robert Oliver | Liberal | Brome | |
Eugène Merril Lesieur Desaulniers | Liberal | Chambly | |
Bruno Bordeleau | Liberal | Champlain | |
Philippe Dufour | Liberal | Charlevoix et Saguenay | |
Honoré Mercier Jr. | Liberal | Châteauguay | |
Joseph-Arthur Gaudreault | Liberal | Chicoutimi | |
Camille-Émile Desjarlais | Liberal | Compton | |
Arthur Sauvé | Conservative | Deux-Montagnes | |
Ernest Ouellet | Liberal | Dorchester | |
Hector Laferté | Liberal | Drummond | |
Georges-Stanislas Grégoire | Liberal | Frontenac | |
Gustave Lemieux | Liberal | Gaspé | |
Joseph Caron | Liberal | Hull | |
Andrew Philps | Liberal | Huntingdon | |
Adélard Forget | Liberal | Iberville | |
Joseph-Édouard Caron | Liberal | Îles-de-la-Madeleine | |
Aimé Ashby | Liberal | Jacques-Cartier | |
Pierre-Joseph Dufresne | Conservative | Joliette | |
Charles-Adolphe Stein | Liberal | Kamouraska | |
Honoré Achim | Liberal | Labelle | |
Émile Moreau | Liberal | Lac-Saint-Jean | |
Wilfrid Cédilot | Liberal | Laprairie | |
Walter Reed | Liberal | L'Assomption | |
Joseph-Olier Renaud Sr. | Conservative | Laval | |
Alfred-Valère Roy | Liberal | Lévis | |
Élisée Thériault | Liberal | L'Islet | |
Joseph-Napoléon Francoeur | Liberal | Lotbinière | |
Adélard Laurendeau | Parti ouvrier | Maisonneuve | |
Rodolphe Tourville | Liberal | Maskinongé | |
Joseph Dufour | Liberal | Matane | |
Lauréat Lapierre | Liberal | Mégantic | |
Alexandre Saurette | Liberal | Missisquoi | |
Joseph-Ferdinand Daniel | Liberal | Montcalm | |
Charles-Abraham Paquet | Liberal | Montmagny | |
Louis-Alexandre Taschereau | Liberal | Montmorency | |
Aurèle Lacombe | Parti ouvrier | Montréal-Dorion | |
Joseph-Hercule Bedard | Liberal | Montréal-Hochelaga | |
Ernest Poulin | Liberal | Montréal-Laurier | |
Bernard-Augustin Conroy | Liberal | Montréal–Sainte-Anne | |
Napoleon Séguin | Liberal | Montréal–Sainte-Marie | |
Charles Ernest Gault | Conservative | Montréal–Saint-Georges | |
Irénée Vautrin | Liberal | Montréal–Saint-Jacques | |
Henry Miles | Liberal | Montréal–Saint-Laurent | |
Peter Bercovitch | Liberal | Montréal–Saint-Louis | |
Amédée Monet | Liberal | Napierville | |
Joseph-Alcide Savoie | Liberal | Nicolet | |
Wallace McDonald | Liberal | Pontiac | |
Lomer Gouin | Liberal | Portneuf | |
Aurèle Leclerc | Liberal | Québec-Comté | |
Lawrence Arthur Cannon | Liberal | Québec-Centre | |
Louis-Alfred Létourneau | Liberal | Québec-Est | |
Martin Madden | Liberal | Québec-Ouest | |
Maurice-Louis Péloquin | Liberal | Richelieu | |
Walter George Mitchell | Liberal | Richmond | |
Auguste-Maurice Tessier | Liberal | Rimouski | |
Joseph-Edmond Robert | Liberal | Rouville | |
Armand Boisseau | Liberal | Saint-Hyacinthe | |
Alexis Bouthillier | Liberal | Saint-Jean | |
Georges-Isidore Delisle | Liberal | Saint-Maurice | |
Arthur Paquet | Liberal | Saint-Sauveur | |
William Stephen Bullock | Liberal | Shefford | |
Joseph-Henri Lemay | Liberal | Sherbrooke | |
Avila Farand | Liberal | Soulanges | |
Alfred-Joseph Bissonnet | Liberal | Stanstead | |
Télésphore Simard | Liberal | Témiscaming | |
Louis-Eugène-Aduire Parrot | Liberal | Témiscouata | |
Athanase David | Liberal | Terrebonne | |
Joseph-Adolphe Tessier | Liberal | Trois-Rivières | |
Hormisdas Pilon | Liberal | Vaudreuil | |
Adrien Beaudry | Liberal | Verchères | |
Charles Allan Smart | Conservative | Westmount | |
Joseph-Eugène Rhéault | Liberal | Wolfe | |
Guillaume-Édouard Ouellette | Liberal | Yamaska |
Other elected MLAs
Other MLAs were elected during the mandate
- Édouard Hamel, Quebec Liberal Party, Portneuf, October 11, 1920 [1]
- Nérée Morin, Quebec Liberal Party, Kamouraska, October 19, 1920 [2]
- Léonide-Nestor-Arthur Ricard, Quebec Liberal Party, Saint-Maurice, October 19, 1920 [3]
- Joseph-Hughes Fortier, Quebec Liberal Party, Beauce, December 15, 1921 [4]
- Jacob Nicol, Quebec Liberal Party, Richmond, December 15, 1921 [5]
- Louis-Philippe Mercier, Quebec Liberal Party, Trois-Rivières, December 15, 1921 [6]
- Cyrinus Lemieux, Quebec Liberal Party, Wolfe, December 15, 1921 [7]
- Joseph Gauthier, Parti ouvrier, Montreal-Ste-Marie, December 22, 1921 [8]
- Eugène Godbout, Quebec Liberal Party, Témiscouata, December 22, 1921 [9]
- Jean-Marie Richard, Quebec Liberal Party, Verchères, December 22, 1921 [10]
- Désiré Lahaie, Quebec Liberal Party, Labelle, August 17, 1922 [11]
- Ludger Forest, Quebec Liberal Party, Sherbrooke, September 7, 1922 [12]
New or renamed electoral districts
The electoral map was reformed in 1922 prior to the elections that were held in the following year. [13]
- Abitibi was formed from parts of Témiscamingue
- The Ottawa district was renamed Hull in 1919.
- Matapédia was formed from parts of Matane
- Montréal-Mercier was formed from parts of Montréal-Laurier and Montréal-Dorion.
- Montréal-Hochelaga was renamed Montréal-Saint-Henri.
- Montréal-Verdun was created from parts of Jacques-Cartier.
- Napierville and Laprairie merged to form Napierville-Laprairie.
- Papineau was formed from parts of Labelle.
Cabinet Ministers
Gouin Cabinet (1919-1920)
- Prime Minister and Executive Council President: Lomer Gouin
- Agriculture: Joseph-Édouard Caron
- Colonisation, Mines and Fishing: Honoré Mercier (1919), Joseph-Édouard Perrault (1919–1920)
- Public Works and Labor: Louis-Alexandre Taschereau (1919), Antonin Galipeault (1919–1920)
- Lands and Forests: Jules Allard (1919), Honoré Mercier Jr (1919–1920)
- Roads: Joseph-Adolphe Tessier (1914–1916)
- Municipal Affairs: Walter Georges Mitchell
- Attorney General:Lomer Gouin (1919), Louis-Alexandre Taschereau (1919–1920)
- Provincial secretary: Louis-Jérémie Décarie (1919), Athanase David (1919–1920)
- Treasurer: Walter Georges Mitchell
Taschereau Cabinet (1920–1923)
- Prime Minister and Executive Council President: Louis-Alexandre Taschereau
- Agriculture: Joseph-Édouard Caron
- Colonisation, Mines and Fishing: Joseph-Édouard Perrault
- Public Works and Labor: Antonin Galipeault
- Lands and Forests: Honoré Mercier Jr
- Roads: Joseph-Adolphe Tessier (1920–1921), Joseph-Léonide Perron (1921–1923)
- Municipal Affairs: Walter Georges Mitchell (1920–1921), Jacob Nichol (1921–1923)
- Attorney General: Louis-Alexandre Taschereau
- Provincial secretary: Athanase David
- Treasurer: Walter Georges Mitchell (1920–1921), Jacob Nichol (1921–1923)
- Members without portfolios: John Charles Kaine, Narcisse Pérodeau, Joseph-Léonide Perron (1920–1921), Napoléon Seguin, Émile Moreau (1921–1923), Aurèle Lacombe (1921–1923)
References
- 1919 election results
- List of Historical Cabinet Ministers (Page 1)
- List of Historical Cabinet Ministers (Page 2)
- v
- t
- e
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)