3rd North-West Assembly | |
---|---|
Type | |
Type | |
History | |
Established | 1894 |
Disbanded | 1898 |
Seats | 29 |
Elections | |
Last election | 1894 |
Meeting place | |
Regina |
The 3rd North-West Legislative Assembly was constituted after the 1894 North-West Territories general election which took place on October 31, 1984. It lasted from 1894 to 1898. Several important developments happened during this Assembly. The Northwest Territories was granted a Premier and a full Executive Council in 1897, and the Yukon was carved from the territory in 1898 due to the territorial government trying to collect taxes from settlers heading to the Klondike Gold Rush.
List of Members of the Legislative Assembly
District | Member |
---|---|
Banff | Robert Brett |
Batoche | Charles Eugene Boucher |
Battleford | James Clinkskill |
Cannington | Samuel Page |
East Calgary | Joseph Bannerman |
Edmonton | Frank Oliver |
High River | John Lineham |
Kinistino | William Frederick Meyers |
Lethbridge | Charles Alexander Magrath |
Macleod | Frederick Haultain |
Medicine Hat | Edward Fearon |
Mitchell | Hilliard Mitchell |
Moose Jaw | James Hamilton Ross |
Moosomin | John Ryerson Neff |
North Qu'Appelle | William Sutherland |
North Regina | George W. Brown |
Prince Albert East | John Betts |
Prince Albert West | John Reid |
Red Deer | John A. Simpson |
Saltcoats | William Eakin |
Souris | George Knowling |
South Qu'Appelle | George Bulyea |
South Regina | Daniel Mowat |
St. Albert | Daniel Maloney |
Victoria | Frank Fraser Tims |
West Calgary | Oswald Critchley |
Whitewood | Archibald Gillis |
Wolseley | James Dill |
Yorkton | Frederick Insinger |
References
Further reading
- Gemmill, J.A., ed. (1897). The Canadian Parliamentary Companion. Ottawa: J. Durie & Son.
- Lingard, Charles Cecil (1946). Territorial government in Canada: the autonomy question in the old North-West Territories. Toronto: University of Toronto Press. OCLC 577721800.
- Thomas, Lewis H. (1978). The struggle for responsible government in the North-West Territories, 1870–97 (2nd ed.). Toronto: University of Toronto Press. ISBN 978-0-8020-2287-5.
- "Territories" (PDF). Provincial Archives of Saskatchewan. 2009. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2007-09-28. Retrieved 2022-06-28.
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