1st Parliament of Canada
Majority parliament
24 September 1867  8 July 1872
Parliament leaders
Prime
Minister
Rt. Hon. Sir John A. Macdonald
July 1, 1867 – November 5, 1873
Cabinet1st Canadian Ministry
Party caucuses
GovernmentConservative Party
& Liberal-Conservative
OppositionLiberal Party
CrossbenchAnti-Confederation Party
House of Commons

Seating arrangements of the House of Commons
Speaker of the
Commons
Hon. James Cockburn
November 6, 1867 – March 25, 1874
Members180 MP seats
List of members
Senate
Speaker of the
Senate
The Hon. Joseph-Édouard Cauchon
November 5, 1867 – May 16, 1869
Government
Senate Leader
Alexander Campbell
July 1, 1867 – November 5, 1873
Opposition
Senate Leader
Luc Letellier de St-Just
July 1, 1867 – November 5, 1873
Senators72 senator seats
List of senators
Sovereign
MonarchVictoria
1 July 1867 – 22 Jan. 1901
Governor
General
The Viscount Monck
1 July 1867 – 14 Nov. 1868
Lord Lisgar
2 Feb. 1869 – 25 June 1872
The Earl of Dufferin
25 June 1872 – 25 Nov. 1878
Sessions
1st session
November 6, 1867 – May 22, 1868
2nd session
April 15, 1869 – June 22, 1869
3rd session
February 15, 1870 – May 12, 1870
4th session
February 15, 1871 – April 14, 1871
5th session
April 11, 1872 – June 14, 1872
 2nd

The 1st Canadian Parliament was in session from November 6, 1867, until July 8, 1872. The membership was set by the 1867 federal election from August 7 to September 20, 1867. It was prorogued prior to the 1872 election.

It was controlled by a majority coalition between the Conservative Party and the Liberal-Conservative Party under Prime Minister Sir John A. Macdonald and the 1st Canadian Ministry. The Official Opposition was the Liberal Party, led by Edward Blake from 1869 to 1871, followed by a vacancy in the Liberal leadership.

The Speaker was James Cockburn. See also List of Canadian electoral districts (1867–1871) for a list of the ridings in this parliament.

Members of Parliament

Following is a full list of members of the first parliament by province. Party leaders are italicized. Cabinet ministers are in boldface. The Prime Minister is both. The Speaker is indicated by "()".

Electoral districts denoted by an asterisk (*) indicates that district was represented by two members.

Nova Scotia

Electoral district Name Party First elected
Annapolis William Hallett Ray Anti-Confederate then Liberal1 1867
Antigonish Hugh McDonald Anti-Confederate then Liberal-Conservative1 1867
Cape Breton James Charles McKeagney Anti-Confederate then Liberal-Conservative1 1867
Colchester Archibald McLelan to June 21, 1869 (appointed to Senate) Anti-Confederate then Liberal-Conservative1 1867
Adams George Archibald from September 9, 1869, to May 19, 1870
(named Lieutenant-Governor of Manitoba and the Northwest Territories)
Liberal-Conservative 1869
Frederick M. Pearson from November 8, 1870 Liberal 1870
Cumberland Charles Tupper Conservative 1867
Digby Alfred William Savary Anti-Confederate then Conservative1 1867
Guysborough Stewart Campbell Anti-Confederate then Liberal-Conservative1 1867
Halifax* Alfred Gilpin Jones Anti-Confederate then Independent 1867
Patrick Power Anti-Confederate then Liberal1 1867
Hants Joseph Howe Anti-Confederate then Liberal-Conservative1 1867
Inverness Hugh Cameron Anti-Confederate then Liberal-Conservative1 1867
Kings William Henry Chipman to April 9, 1870 (death) Anti-Confederate then Liberal1 1867
Leverett de Veber Chipman from June 23, 1870 Liberal 1870
Lunenburg Edmund Mortimer McDonald Anti-Confederate then Liberal-Conservative1 1867
Pictou James William Carmichael Anti-Confederate then Liberal1 1867
Queens James Fraser Forbes Anti-Confederate then Liberal1 1867
Richmond William Croke to March 11, 1869 (death) Anti-Confederate then Conservative1 1867
Isaac Le Vesconte from April 20, 1869 Conservative1 1869
Shelburne Thomas Coffin Anti-Confederate then Liberal-Conservative1 1867
Victoria William Ross Anti-Confederate then Liberal1 1867
Yarmouth Thomas Killam to December 15, 1868 (death) Anti-Confederate 1867
Frank Killam from April 20, 1869 Liberal 1868

Note:

1 – The Anti-Confederate Party dissolved after failing to secure Nova Scotia's secession from Confederation. In 1869 its members joined other parties, or in one case sat as an independent.

New Brunswick

Electoral district Name Party First elected
Albert John Wallace Liberal 1867
Carleton Charles Connell Liberal 1867
Charlotte John Bolton Liberal 1867
City and County of Saint John John Hamilton Gray Conservative 1867
City of Saint John Samuel Leonard Tilley Liberal-Conservative 1867
Gloucester Timothy Warren Anglin Liberal 1867
Kent Auguste Renaud Liberal 1867
King's George Ryan Liberal 1867
Northumberland John Mercer Johnson to September 8, 1868 (death) Liberal 1867
Richard Hutchison from December 24, 1868 Liberal 1868
Queen's John Ferris Liberal 1867
Restigouche John McMillan to February 15, 1868 (appointed Inspector of Post Offices) Liberal 1867
William Murray Caldwell from March 13, 1868, to September 29, 1870 (death) Liberal 1868
George Moffat from November 29, 1870 Conservative 1870
Sunbury Charles Burpee Liberal 1867
Victoria John Costigan Liberal-Conservative 1867
Westmorland Albert James Smith Liberal 1867
York Charles Fisher to October 3, 1868 (appointed to the Supreme Court of New Brunswick) Liberal 1867
John Pickard from October 28, 1868 Independent Liberal 1868

Quebec

Electoral district Name Party First elected
Argenteuil John Abbott Liberal-Conservative 1867
Bagot Pierre-Samuel Gendron Conservative 1867
Beauce Christian Pozer Liberal 1867
Beauharnois Michael Cayley Conservative 1867
Bellechasse Louis Napoléon Casault to May 26, 1870 (appointed to Superior Court of Quebec) Conservative 1867
Télesphore Fournier from August 15, 1870 Liberal 1870
Berthier Anselme Pâquet Liberal 1867
Bonaventure Théodore Robitaille Conservative 1867
Brome Christopher Dunkin4 to October 24, 1871 (appointed to Superior Court of Quebec) Conservative 1867
Edward Carter from November 17, 1871 Conservative 1871
Chambly Pierre Benoit Conservative 1867
Champlain John Jones Ross Conservative 1867
Charlevoix Simon Xavier Cimon Conservative 1867
Châteauguay Luther Holton Liberal 1867
Chicoutimi—Saguenay Pierre Alexis Tremblay Liberal 1867
Compton John Henry Pope5 Liberal-Conservative 1867
Dorchester Hector-Louis Langevin Conservative 1867
Drummond—Arthabaska Louis Adélard Sénécal Conservative 1867
Gaspé Pierre Fortin Conservative 1867
Hochelaga Antoine Dorion Liberal 1867
Huntingdon John Rose2 to September 29, 1869 (resigned) Liberal-Conservative 1867
Julius Scriver from October 30, 1869 Liberal 1869
Iberville François Béchard Liberal 1867
Jacques Cartier Guillaume Gaucher Conservative 1867
Joliette François Benjamin Godin Liberal 1867
Kamouraska no election in 1867 due to rioting
Charles Pelletier from February 17, 1869 Liberal 1869
Laprairie Alfred Pinsonneault Conservative 1867
L'Assomption Louis Archambeault Liberal-Conservative 1867
Laval Joseph Bellerose Conservative 1867
Lévis Joseph Blanchet Liberal-Conservative 1867
L'Islet Barthélemy Pouliot3 Conservative 1867
Lotbinière Henri Joly De Lotbinière Liberal 1867
Maskinongé George Caron Conservative 1867
Mégantic George Irvine Conservative 1867
Missisquoi Brown Chamberlin to June 6, 1870 (resigned to become Queen's Printer) Conservative 1867
George Baker from July 5, 1870 Liberal-Conservative 1870
Montcalm Joseph Dufresne to July 13, 1871 (resigned) Conservative 1867
Firmin Dugas from September 15, 1871 Conservative 1871
Montmagny Joseph-Octave Beaubien Conservative 1867
Montmorency Joseph-Édouard Cauchon to November 1, 1867 Conservative 1867
Jean Langlois from December 11, 1867 Conservative 1867
Montreal Centre Thomas Workman Liberal 1867
Montreal East George-Étienne Cartier Liberal-Conservative 1867
Montreal West Thomas D'Arcy McGee to April 7, 1868 (assassinated) Liberal-Conservative 1867
Michael Patrick Ryan from April 20, 1868 Liberal-Conservative 1868
Napierville Sixte Coupal dit la Reine Liberal 1867
Nicolet Joseph Gaudet Conservative 1867
Ottawa (County of) Alonzo Wright Liberal-Conservative 1867
Pontiac Edmund Heath Conservative] 1867
Portneuf Jean Brousseau Conservative 1867
Quebec-Centre Georges-Honoré Simard Conservative 1867
Quebec County Pierre-Joseph-Olivier Chauveau Conservative 1867
Quebec East Pierre Huot to June 14, 1870 (resigned to become Postmaster of Quebec) Liberal 1867
Adolphe Guillet dit Tourangeau from July 18, 1870 Conservative 1870
Quebec West Thomas McGreevy Liberal-Conservative 1867
Richelieu Thomas McCarthy to September 23, 1870 (death) Conservative 1867
Georges Isidore Barthe from November 18, 1870 Independent Conservative 1870
Richmond—Wolfe William Hoste Webb Conservative 1867
Rimouski George Sylvain Conservative 1867
Rouville Guillaume Cheval dit St-Jacques Liberal 1867
Saint Maurice Louis Léon Lesieur Desaulniers to September 29, 1868 (resigned) Conservative 1867
Élie Lacerte from October 30, 1868 Conservative 1868
Shefford Lucius Huntington Liberal 1867
Town of Sherbrooke Alexander Galt Liberal-Conservative 1867
Soulanges Luc Masson Conservative 1867
St. Hyacinthe Alexandre Kierzkowski to August 4, 1870 (death) Liberal 1867
Louis Delorme from September 1, 1870 Liberal 1870
St. John's François Bourassa Liberal 1867
Stanstead Charles Colby Liberal-Conservative 1867
Témiscouata Charles Bertrand Conservative 1867
Terrebonne Louis Masson Conservative 1867
Three Rivers Louis Boucher De Niverville to September 30, 1868 (resigned) Conservative 1867
William McDougall from October 17, 1868 Conservative 1868
Two Mountains Jean-Baptiste Daoust Conservative 1867
Vaudreuil Donald McMillan Conservative 1867
Verchères Félix Geoffrion Liberal 1867
Yamaska Moïse Fortier Liberal 1867

Four Quebec members recontested their seats in byelections, and were re-elected:

2John Rose was reelected in Huntingdon on November 28, 1867, after being named Minister of Finance.

3Barthélemy Pouliot was unseated on petition, but was reelected in L'Islet on July 14, 1869.

4Christopher Dunkin was reelected in Brome on November 29, 1869, after being named Minister of Agriculture.

5John Henry Pope was reelected in Compton on November 11, 1871, after being named Minister of Agriculture following Dunkin's resignation from Parliament.

Ontario

Electoral district Name Party First elected
Addington James Lapum Conservative 1867
Algoma Wemyss Mackenzie Simpson to April 26, 1871 (appointed Indian Commissioner for Rupert's Land) Conservative 1867
Frederick William Cumberland from June 30, 1871 Conservative 1871
Bothwell David Mills Liberal 1867
Brant North John Young Bown Liberal-Conservative 1867
Brant South Edmund Burke Wood Liberal 1867
Brockville James Crawford Conservative 1867
Bruce North Alexander Sproat Conservative 1867
Bruce South Francis Hurdon Conservative 1867
Cardwell Thomas Roberts Ferguson Conservative 1867
Carleton John Holmes Liberal-Conservative 1867
Cornwall John Sandfield Macdonald Liberal 1867
Dundas John Sylvester Ross Liberal-Conservative 1867
Durham East Francis H. Burton Conservative 1867
Durham West Edward Blake Liberal 1867
Elgin East Thomas William Dobbie Conservative 1867
Elgin West John H. Munroe Conservative 1867
Essex John O'Connor Conservative 1867
Frontenac Thomas Kirkpatrick to March 26, 1870 (death) Conservative 1867
George Airey Kirkpatrick from April 27, 1870 Conservative 1870
Glengarry Donald Alexander Macdonald Liberal 1867
Grenville South Walter Shanly Conservative 1867
Grey North George Snider Liberal 1867
Grey South George Jackson Conservative 1867
Haldimand David Thompson Liberal 1867
Halton John White Liberal 1867
Hamilton Charles Magill Liberal 1867
Hastings East Robert Read to February 24, 1871 (appointed to Senate) Conservative 1867
John White from March 20, 1871 Conservative 1871
Hastings North Mackenzie Bowell Conservative 1867
Hastings West James Brown Conservative 1867
Huron North Joseph Whitehead Liberal 1867
Huron South Malcolm Colin Cameron Liberal 1867
Kent Rufus Stephenson Conservative 1867
Kingston The Right Honourable Sir John A. Macdonald, Prime Minister of Canada Liberal-Conservative 1867
Lambton Alexander Mackenzie Liberal 1867
Lanark North William C.B. McDougall Liberal-Conservative 1867
Lanark South Alexander Morris6 Conservative 1867
Leeds North and Grenville North Francis Jones Conservative 1867
Leeds South John Willoughby Crawford Conservative 1867
Lennox Richard John Cartwright Conservative 1867
Liberal
Lincoln James Rea Benson to March 14, 1868 (appointed to the Senate) Liberal-Conservative 1867
Thomas Rodman Merritt from April 13, 1868 Liberal 1868
London John Carling Liberal-Conservative 1867
Middlesex East Crowell Willson Liberal-Conservative 1867
Middlesex North Thomas Scatcherd Liberal 1867
Middlesex West Angus Peter McDonald Conservative 1867
Monck Lachlin McCallum Liberal-Conservative 1867
Niagara Angus Morrison Conservative 1867
Norfolk North Aquila Walsh Conservative 1867
Norfolk South Peter Lawson Liberal 1867
Northumberland East Joseph Keeler Liberal-Conservative 1867
Northumberland West James Cockburn (†) Conservative 1867
Ontario North John Hall Thompson Liberal 1867
Ontario South Thomas Nicholson Gibbs Liberal-Conservative 1867
City of Ottawa Joseph Merrill Currier Liberal-Conservative 1867
Oxford North Thomas Oliver Liberal 1867
Oxford South Ebenezer Vining Bodwell Liberal 1867
Peel John Hillyard Cameron Conservative 1867
Perth North James Redford Liberal 1867
Perth South Robert MacFarlane Liberal 1867
Peterborough East Peregrine Maitland Grover Conservative 1867
Peterborough West Charles Perry Conservative 1867
Prescott Albert Hagar Liberal 1867
Prince Edward Walter Ross Liberal 1867
Renfrew North John Rankin to October 12, 1869 (resigned) Conservative 1867
Francis Hincks from November 13, 1869 Liberal-Conservative 1869
Renfrew South Daniel McLachlin to June 3, 1869 (resigned) Liberal 1867
John Lorn McDougall from July 12, 1869 Liberal 1869
Russell James Alexander Grant Conservative 1867
Simcoe North Thomas David McConkey Liberal 1867
Simcoe South William Carruthers Little Liberal-Conservative 1867
Stormont Samuel Ault Liberal-Conservative 1867
Toronto East James Beaty Conservative 1867
Victoria North John Morison Liberal 1867
Victoria South George Kempt Liberal 1867
Waterloo North Isaac Erb Bowman Liberal 1867
Waterloo South James Young Liberal 1867
Welland Thomas Clark Street Conservative 1867
Wellington Centre Thomas Sutherland Parker to October 24, 1868 (death) Liberal 1867
James Ross from January 18, 1869 Liberal 1869
Wellington North George Alexander Drew Liberal-Conservative 1867
Wellington South David Stirton Liberal 1867
Wentworth North James McMonies Liberal 1867
Wentworth South Joseph Rymal Liberal 1867
West Toronto Robert Alexander Harrison Conservative 1867
York East James Metcalfe Liberal 1867
York North James Pearson Wells Liberal 1867
York West William Pearce Howland to July 14, 1868 (appointed Lieutenant Governor of Ontario) Liberal-Conservative 1867
Amos Wright from August 14, 1868 Liberal 1867

Note:

6 – One Ontario MP, Alexander Morris, recontested his seat in a byelection. He was reelected in Lanark South on November 29, 1869, after being appointed Minister of Inland Revenue.

Manitoba

Manitoba joined Confederation in 1870. Byelections to choose Manitoba's representatives were held on March 2 and March 3, 1871.

Electoral district Name Party First elected
Lisgar John Christian Schultz from March 2, 1871 Conservative 1871
Marquette*
(both candidates declared elected due to a tie)
James S. Lynch from March 2, 1871 Liberal 1871
Angus McKay from March 2, 1871 Conservative 1871
Selkirk Donald Alexander Smith from March 2, 1871 Independent Conservative 1871
Provencher Pierre Delorme from March 3, 1871 Conservative 1871

British Columbia

British Columbia joined Confederation in 1871. Byelections to choose the province's representatives were held in November and December of that year.

Electoral district Name Party First elected
Cariboo District Joshua Spencer Thompson from December 19, 1871 Liberal-Conservative 1871
New Westminster District Hugh Nelson from December 13, 1871 Liberal-Conservative 1871
Vancouver Robert Wallace from December 15, 1871 Conservative 1871
Victoria* Amor De Cosmos from November 24, 1871 Liberal 1871
Henry Nathan, Jr. from November 24, 1871 Liberal 1871
Yale District Charles Frederick Houghton from December 19, 1871 Liberal 1871

Pre-Confederation predecessors

Colony Assembly
Province of Canada 8th Parliament
Nova Scotia 22nd General Assembly
New Brunswick 21st Legislative Assembly

By-elections

By-electionDateIncumbentPartyWinnerPartyCauseRetained
Yale District December 19, 1871 New seat Charles Frederick Houghton      Liberal New riding as a result of British Columbia joining Confederation. NA
Cariboo December 19, 1871 New seat Joshua Spencer Thompson      Liberal-Conservative New riding as a result of British Columbia joining Confederation. NA
Vancouver Island December 15, 1871 New seat Robert Wallace      Conservative New riding as a result of British Columbia joining Confederation. NA
New Westminster December 13, 1871 New seat Hugh Nelson      Liberal-Conservative New riding as a result of British Columbia joining Confederation. NA
Victoria November 24, 1871 New seat Henry Nathan, Jr. and Amor De Cosmos      Liberal New riding as a result of British Columbia joining Confederation. Two MPs elected NA
Brome November 17, 1871 Christopher Dunkin      Conservative Edward Carter      Conservative Appointed to the Superior Court of Quebec Yes
Compton November 11, 1871 John Henry Pope      Conservative John Henry Pope      Conservative Recontested upon appointment as Minister of Agriculture Yes
Montcalm September 15, 1871 Joseph Dufresne      Conservative Firmin Dugas      Conservative Appointed Sheriff of the County of St. John Yes
Algoma June 30, 1871 Wemyss Mackenzie Simpson      Conservative Frederick William Cumberland      Conservative Appointed Indian Commissioner for the North Yes
Hastings East March 20, 1871 Robert Read      Conservative John White      Conservative Called to the Senate Yes
Provencher March 3, 1871 New seat Pierre Delorme      Conservative New riding as a result of Manitoba joining Confederation. NA
Selkirk March 2, 1871 New seat Donald Alexander Smith      Independent Conservative New riding as a result of Manitoba joining Confederation. NA
Lisgar March 2, 1871 New seat John Christian Schultz      Conservative New riding as a result of Manitoba joining Confederation. NA
Marquette March 2, 1871 New seat James S. Lynch and Angus McKay Liberal and Conservative New riding as a result of Manitoba joining Confederation. Two MPs elected due to a tie. NA
Restigouche November 29, 1870 William Murray Caldwell      Liberal George Moffat, Sr.      Conservative Appointed Inspector of Post Offices in New Brunswick No
Richelieu November 18, 1870 Thomas McCarthy      Conservative Georges Isidore Barthe      Independent Conservative Death No
Colchester November 8, 1870 Adams George Archibald      Liberal-Conservative Frederick M. Pearson      Liberal Appointed Lieutenant-Governor of Manitoba and the North-West Territories No
St. Hyacinthe September 1, 1870 Alexandre-Édouard Kierzkowski      Liberal Louis Delorme      Liberal Death Yes
Bellechasse August 15, 1870 Louis-Napoléon Casault      Conservative Télesphore Fournier      Liberal Appointed to Superior Court of Quebec No
Quebec East July 18, 1870 Pierre-Gabriel Huot      Liberal Adolphe Guillet dit Tourangeau      Conservative Appointed Postmaster at Quebec No
Missisquoi July 5, 1870 Brown Chamberlin      Conservative George Barnard Baker      Liberal-Conservative Appointed Queen's Printer Yes
Kings June 23, 1870 William Henry Chipman      Anti-Confederate Leverett de Veber Chipman      Liberal Death No
Cumberland June 15, 1870 Charles Tupper      Conservative Charles Tupper      Conservative Recontested upon appointment as President of the Privy Council Yes
Frontenac April 27, 1870 Thomas Kirkpatrick      Conservative George Airey Kirkpatrick      Conservative Death Yes
Brome November 29, 1869 Christopher Dunkin      Conservative Christopher Dunkin      Conservative Recontested upon appointment as Minister of Agriculture Yes
Lanark South November 29, 1869 Alexander Morris      Conservative Alexander Morris      Conservative Recontested upon appointment as Minister of Inland Revenue Yes
Renfrew South November 29, 1869 Daniel McLachlin      Liberal John Lorn McDougall      Liberal Resignation Yes
Renfrew North November 13, 1869 John Rankin      Liberal-Conservative Francis Hincks      Conservative Resignation to provide a seat for Hincks Yes
Huntingdon October 30, 1869 John Rose      Liberal-Conservative Julius Scriver      Liberal Resignation to move to London where he acted as the Prime Minister's unofficial representative to the UK. No
Colchester September 9, 1869 Archibald McLelan      Anti-Confederate Adams George Archibald      Liberal-Conservative Called to the Senate No
L'Islet July 14, 1869 Barthélemy Pouliot      Conservative Barthélemy Pouliot      Conservative Election annulled Yes
Wellington Centre July 12, 1869 Thomas Sutherland Parker      Liberal James Ross      Liberal Death Yes
Hants April 24, 1869 Joseph Howe      Anti-Confederate Joseph Howe      Liberal-Conservative Recontested upon appointment as President of the Privy Council No
Yarmouth April 20, 1869 Thomas Killam      Anti-Confederate Frank Killam      Liberal Death No
Richmond April 20, 1869 William Joseph Croke      Anti-Confederate Isaac LeVesconte      Conservative Death No
Kamouraska February 17, 1869 Vacant Charles Alphonse Pantaléon Pelletier      Liberal No election held in 1867 due to riots NA
Northumberland December 24, 1868 John Mercer Johnson      Liberal Richard Hutchison      Liberal Death Yes
Saint Maurice October 30, 1868 Louis-Léon Lesieur Desaulniers      Conservative Élie Lacerte      Conservative Appointed inspector of prisons and asylums in Quebec Yes
York October 28, 1868 Charles Fisher      Liberal John Pickard      Independent Liberal Appointed to New Brunswick Supreme Court No
Three Rivers October 17, 1868 Louis-Charles Boucher de Niverville      Conservative William McDougall      Conservative Appointed sheriff for the district of Trois-Rivières Yes
York West August 14, 1868 William Pearce Howland      Liberal-Conservative Amos Wright      Liberal Appointed Lieutenant-Governor of Ontario No
Montreal West April 20, 1868 Thomas D'Arcy McGee      Liberal-Conservative Michael Patrick Ryan      Liberal-Conservative Death (assassinated) Yes
Lincoln April 13, 1868 James Rea Benson      Liberal-Conservative Thomas Rodman Merritt      Liberal Called to the Senate No
Restigouche March 13, 1868 John McMillan      Liberal William Murray Caldwell      Liberal Appointed Inspector of Post Offices in New Brunswick Yes
Montmorency December 11, 1867 Joseph-Édouard Cauchon      Conservative Jean Langlois      Conservative Called to the Senate Yes
Huntingdon November 28, 1867 John Rose      Liberal-Conservative John Rose      Liberal-Conservative Recontested upon appointment as Minister of Finance Yes

Throne Speeches

1st Session

On Thursday November 7, 1867. The 1st session of the 1st parliament of the Dominion of Canada opened with a speech from the throne by the governor general, Charles Stanley Monck (The Viscount Monck).

In the speech, the governor general remarks the creation of the Dominion of Canada itself and the future expansion of the country from the Atlantic Ocean to the Pacific. Some notable objectives for this first government would be to determine "Currency, Customs, Excise, and Revenue generally,-for the adoption of a uniform Postal System,-for the proper management and maintenance of the Public Works and Properties of the Dominion,-for the adoption of a well considered scheme of Militia Organization and Defence, for the proper administration of Indian affairs,-for the introduction of uniform Laws respecting Patents of Invention and Discovery,-the naturalization of Aliens,-and :the assimilation of the Criminal Law, and the Laws relating to Bankruptcy and Insolvency." He also notes the imperative immediate construction of the intercolonial railway. As well as the protection and development of Fisheries and Marine Interests. Finally, he speaks on the necessity to establish uniform laws regarding elections.[1]

2nd Session

On Thursday April 15, 1869. The 2nd session of the 1st parliament of the Dominion of Canada opened with a speech from the throne by the governor general, John Young (The Lord Lisgar).

In the speech, the governor general speaks on confederation and the initiatives to bring parts of the Hudson Bay Company (The Northwest Territory) and Newfoundland into the union. He also speaks on the assimilation of provincial criminal laws into federal criminal laws. He also touches on future bills focusing on Elections, Bankruptcy and Insolvency, and Patents of invention and discovery.[2]

3rd Session

On Tuesday February 15, 1870. The 3rd session of the 1st parliament of the Dominion of Canada opened with a speech from the throne by the governor general, John Young (The Lord Lisgar).

In the speech, he remarks the growing economy of the Dominion - specifically noting the fisheries. He also speaks on the difficulties faced in acquiring the Northwest Territory and the desire to go through with the assimilation. He continues in speaking on making the election process uniform among the country. He also notes the necessity to create a Court of Appeal as well as the need to prepare for the upcoming 1871 census.[3]

4th Session

On Wednesday February 15, 1871. The 4th session of the 1st parliament of the Dominion of Canada opened with a speech from the throne by the governor general, John Young (The Lord Lisgar).

In the speech, he highlights the menace of invasion from the United States. He also celebrates the creation of the province of Manitoba and looks forward to the same from British Columbia. On that topic, he speaks on the importance of the interoceanic railway to be created. He encourages more immigration to these new territories. He recommends the swift standardization of currency to not fall into the divisiveness seen in Europe. He says the census will occur on April 3, 1971. He briefly touches on some future bills pertaining to Parliamentary Elections, Weights and Measures, Insurance Companies, Savings Banks, and for the Consolidation and amendment of the Inspection Laws.[4]

5th Session

On Thursday April 11, 1872. The 5th session of the 1st parliament of the Dominion of Canada opened with a speech from the throne by the governor general, John Young (The Lord Lisgar).

In the speech, he highlights the threat of invasion of Manitoba from the United States. He remarks on a conference held in Ottawa in September 1871 on the subject of immigration. He recognizes the adoption of British Columbia into the union and the continuation of the railway project. He encourages the development of canals and a direct water communication between the Gulf of St. Lawrence and the Bay of Fundy. He notes that the census has taken place. He briefly mentions future bills pertaining to Judges of Superior Courts-to the regulation and management of the Public Lands and Mines of the Dominion in Manitoba and the North West Territories, aid for the amendment of the laws relating to the Public Health.[5]

References

  1. "Documents. Throne Speech" (PDF). parl.ca. Retrieved 31 May 2023.
  2. "Documents. Throne Speech" (PDF). parl.ca. Retrieved 31 May 2023.
  3. "Documents. Throne Speech" (PDF). parl.ca. Retrieved 31 May 2023.
  4. "Documents. Throne Speech" (PDF). parl.ca. Retrieved 31 May 2023.
  5. "Documents. Throne Speech" (PDF). parl.ca. Retrieved 31 May 2023.

Works cited

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