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History

Sir John A.
Macdonald
Macdonald, Sir John Alexander ), first prime
minister of the Dominion of Canada , 1878-1891). Macdonald
was a practical politician whose deals and maneuvers made possible
the creation of the Dominion of Canada and its territorial expansion
across the continent. He survived political scandal to complete
a program of nation-building that included policies of tariffs
to protect Canadian industry, the building of transcontinental
railroads, and the encouragement of western settlement. For most
of his career he was a powerful figure in Canadian politics.
Early Life
Macdonald was born in Glasgow, Scotland, in 1815. His father,
Hugh Macdonald, came from Dornoch, Sutherlandshire. His mother,
Helen Shaw, came from a farming family of Inverness. Both left
the Highlands to go to Glasgow, where Hugh Macdonald set up a
small manufacturing business. The business failed, and the Macdonald
family emigrated to Canada when John was five years old. It was
only through the perseverance of his mother that Macdonald received
a good education.
At the age of ten Macdonald was sent away from home to attend
the Midland Grammar School in Kingston, Ontario. When he was
15, he was apprenticed to George Mackenzie, a Kingston lawyer.
By the time he was 18, he had inspired such confidence that Mackenzie
sent him toa branch office at Napanee in southeast Ontario.
When Mackenzie died in 1835, Macdonald returned to Kingston to
start his own legal practice. Macdonald was called to the bar
a year later.
Macdonald's legal reputation grew steadily, based on a series
of small cases rather than on any dramatic triumph. By 1842 his
law office had become one of the busiest in Canada. The next
year he was appointed a councilman in Kingston. In 1844 he decided
to run for a Kingston seat in the legislative assembly of Canada,
which then consisted of the two colonies of Canada West (formerly
Upper Canada, now Ontario) and Canada East (formerly Lower Canada,
now Québec). Although technically united as the Province
of Canada, Canada East and Canada West each had their own legislative
assemblies, with dual parties and dual premiers. Macdonald won
by a large majority, although his opponent had the advantage
of being the incumbent.
Early Political Career
First Ministry
From the beginning, Macdonald voted with the Conservative, or
Tory, Party. During the next few years he helped to build the
power of a more moderate group, the Liberal-Conservative Party,
which then assumed the name of Conservative Party. In 1847 the
32-year-old Macdonald was made receiver general, an office he
held for less than a year.
Opposition
The election of 1848 swept a rival party, the Reformers, into
office, and Macdonald was one of the few Conservatives to retain
his seat. He worked to increase his influence among the Conservatives
and to broaden the appeal of his party. He was willing to work
with anyone who would serve his immediate or long-term aims.
He demonstrated this attitude in the 1854 election, when the
Conservatives and the radical Clear Grits (later Liberals) worked
together to defeat the Reform government.
Minister
Sir Allan MacNab, a Tory and head of the Conservative Party,
was asked to form a government. MacNab had few supporters, and
Macdonald helped him organize a Liberal-Conservative coalition.
In this administration, Macdonald served as attorney general
for Canada West, a post he kept in the MacNab-Taché administration
of 1855.
Macdonald formed his first cabinet in 1856. In an attempt to
secure the support of primarily French-speaking Canada East,
he nominated the French-Canadian Sir Étienne Taché
for the post of premier of Canada East. Macdonald became the
premier of Canada West. When Taché resigned in 1857 and
the British governor-general asked Macdonald to form a new cabinet,
he recommended another French-Canadian, Sir George Étienne
Cartier, to take Taché's place.
George Brown, the leader of the Grits from Canada West, was Macdonald's
chief opponent at that time. In 1858 the government introduced
a measure making Ottawa the permanent capital of Canada. Brown
prevented this measure from passing, and Macdonald and Cartier
resigned, allowing Brown to become premier of Canada West. However,
the new government lasted only two days, and when the governor-general
asked Cartier to form a new government, he brought Macdonald
back with him. Cartier then became premier of Canada East, and
Macdonald attorney general. At that time, ministers could switch
positions in the cabinet without having to be reelected. Members
of the cabinet exchanged posts with one another and then switched
back the following day. This "double shuffle" allowed
the Conservatives to maintain their hold on the cabinet, as well
as allowing Macdonald to switch from attorney general back to
premier of Canada West. One of the few newcomers to the cabinet
was Alexander Galt, a railway promoter whose dream was the federation
of Britain's North American colonies, which would unite all the
British and Canadian lands into one country. He entered the cabinet
on the condition that it would attempt to bring about federation,
but Macdonald did little about it at the time.
The next few years were mainly years of maneuvering by Macdonald
to keep his party together. He fought against Brown's solution
of representation by population, which would have allowed the
more populous section of Canada West to dominate the legislature.
To preserve the union, Macdonald claimed, Canada East and Canada
West must continue to have an equal number of members in the
assembly.
Out of Power
Macdonald's government fell in 1862 as an indirect result of
the American Civil War. The Union resented the sympathy that
Great Britain and Canada were giving the South. As a result,
the Union allowed the Fenians (Irish patriots who hoped to gain
Ireland's independence from Britain) to raid Canada from the
United States. Macdonald introduced a militia bill to protect
Canada, but the bill was defeated, Macdonald resigned, and a
Liberal administration took office. The Liberals had far less
political skill than the Conservatives, and could do even less
than the previous ministry about the colonies' problems. This
government fell early in 1864.
Return to Office
The new Conservative government, in which Macdonald was attorney
general, remained in power for only three months. In June 1864
the political impasse of the Canadas became so serious that a
broad government coalition was formed. This was known as the
Taché-Macdonald government. Brown, Macdonald's old enemy,
joined the government on the understanding that it would press
for a general federal union of all the British North American
colonies. If this project were to fail, Brown would demand a
dissolution of the existing union.
The Maritime colonies, which consisted of Nova Scotia, Prince
Edward Island, New Brunswick, and Newfoundland, were considering
the question of their own union and planned to meet at Charlottetown,
Prince Edward Island, on September 1, 1864. Macdonald saw his
opportunity and secured an invitation for the Canadians to attend.
The Maritimers put off their own discussion until they had heard
the Canadians. Macdonald spoke of the advantages in strength
that federation would bring, Cartier stressed the preservation
of provincial rights, Brown pointed out the safeguards of an
upper house on the lines of the U.S. Senate, (see Congress of
the United States) and Galt explained the financial advantages
of federation. Together they persuaded the Maritimers to attend
a formal conference to be held in Québec on October 10.
Macdonald then showed himself at his greatest. He said in a speech
at Halifax, Nova Scotia: "I have been dragging myself through
the dreary waste of colonial politics. I thought there was no
end, nothing worthy of ambition, but now I see something which
is well worthy of all that I have suffered in the cause of my
little country." Under the stress of internal political
difficulties and external dangers, Macdonald was changing from
a dabbler in politics to a man with an ideal: the creation of
a new nation.
At the Québec Conference, Macdonald fought for a strong
central government. He proposed 72 resolutions, all of which
were passed. These later formed the basis of the federal constitution.
In Canada the motion to join the confederation was passed with
large majorities in both houses of the legislature. However,
it failed in the first instance in all four of the Maritime colonies.
Canada would have settled for its own union, but by then the
British government was also pressing for federation. Macdonald
never lost hope, and in 1865, long before federation was a fact,
he proposed to Great Britain that all British territory east
of the Rocky Mountains be turned over to Canada.
Taché died in 1865. Macdonald would ordinarily have succeeded
to the premiership of Canada West, but he still faced the obstacle
of Brown's jealousy. Rather than risk the cause of federation,
he made Narcisse Belleau the new premier. The work of persuading
the Maritime colonies went on, and finally, after a change of
cabinet in New Brunswick, Nova Scotia and New Brunswick consented
to join the new union. On March 28, 1867, the British North America
Act was passed, creating the Dominion of Canada with the provinces
of Ontario, Québec, New Brunswick, and Nova Scotia. Even
in triumph, Macdonald was soberly cautious: "We are all
mere petty provincial politicians at present; perhaps by and
by some of us will rise to the level of national statesmen."
Prime Minister of Canada
Lord Monck, the first governor-general of Canada, swore in Macdonald
as the first prime minister on July 1, 1867. He formed a coalition
government drawn from the Conservatives and Reformers who had
supported confederation, giving each party approximately equal
weight in the new Cabinet. Brown remained in the opposition that
later developed into the Liberal Party.
In the August legislative elections the government won overwhelmingly
in Ontario and Québec and did well in New Brunswick. The
results in Nova Scotia, however, showed that the dominion's troubles
were not over. Led by Joseph Howe, all but one of the members
elected were opposed to the federation. The province threatened
to withdraw. When Britain refused to allow this, some elements
in Nova Scotia even advocated joining the United States. Macdonald
settled the problem by increasing the federal subsidy to the
province by $140,000 and by taking Howe into the cabinet. Although
the opponents of federation protested that the province had been
sold for 80 cents a man, they won only one seat in the next election.
In 1868 the British Parliament transferred the whole of the northwest
east of the Rockies to Canada. Macdonald treated the territory
as if it were virgin land and appointed a lieutenant governor
without consulting the settlers, who were mostly indigenous peoples
and métis (people who were a mixture of the French and
indigenous peoples). In 1869 Louis Riel, a métis, led
the Red River Rebellion that, although unsuccessful, gained provincial
status for the Red River area; this area became the province
of Manitoba and joined the dominion in 1870.
One of Macdonald's greatest achievements was persuading British
Columbia to join the federation. In 1871 the colony was in severe
debt. One faction wanted to join the United States, another to
remain British, while only a few considered joining the dominion.
Nevertheless, a small party of federationists, favored by the
British government, was organized in 1867. As an inducement to
British Columbia, Macdonald offered to build a railway connecting
Québec to British Columbia. Moreover, he promised to complete
it within ten years. Convinced, British Columbia joined the dominion
on July 20, 1871, and Canada stretched from the Atlantic to the
Pacific. Prince Edward Island joined two years later, making
Newfoundland the only holdout.
Parliament was dissolved in 1872, and in the subsequent election,
Macdonald suffered a severe setback. The Conservatives' campaign
was vigorous and heavily subsidized, but their dream of a federated
Canada was not matched in appeal by their local policies. They
lost Ontario and barely won Québec. It was only majorities
in the Maritime provinces that kept them in power, but that power
was not to last long.
The idea of a railway to the Pacific was a good one, but the
government's plans for carrying it out were not. Macdonald wanted
the railway built by a Canadian company, and in 1873 he created
one for that purpose. Sir Hugh Allan, a shipping magnate, was
the chief promoter. However, it soon became clear that the money
behind Allan was mainly from the United States and that this
money was subsidizing the Conservatives. In July 1873, letters
stolen from Allan's lawyer showed that Allan had provided $350,000
in campaign funds for the previous election. Macdonald maintained
his innocence, but a personal telegram made it clear that he
was deeply involved. Although a Parliamentary commission later
cleared him of blame, Macdonald resigned. It seemed that his
political career had come to an end.
Once More in Opposition
Macdonald was succeeded by the Liberal Alexander Mackenzie. The
Liberals were now faced with the overwhelming problem of building
the railway to British Columbia. The world economic depression
after 1873 meant that no private investment could be found, so
the Liberals attempted to build the railway as a public venture.
Their efforts were half-hearted, and British Columbia was on
the verge of secession. During these years, Macdonald played
a responsible opposition role. He even helped the Liberals reform
the legal system and establish the Supreme Court of Canada.
The election of 1878 showed Macdonald's greatness, which lay
in his faith in Canada's capacity to achieve a firm union. He
knew what to do to attain this goal, and he knew he could do
it. Everywhere he campaigned, Macdonald played to the local audience.
He discovered what people needed and promised it to them. There
was something for everyone in his National Policy, as his program
was called.
The Conservatives gained an overwhelming victory. Macdonald himself
was defeated at Kingston but ran again in Victoria, British Columbia.
In spite of his casual manner, his drinking bouts, and his chronic
indebtedness, he had become the grand old man of Canada. Without
his leadership the election campaign would have been a failure.
Second Macdonald Government
The greatest achievement of Macdonald's last years was the building
of the Canadian Pacific Railway (CPR). The decision to go ahead
with the railway, after the Allan scandals, was a display of
remarkable courage, as well as unusual stubbornness. Macdonald
was fortunate that there was a temporary recovery from the depression
about that time, and he negotiated the contract for the railway's
construction in 1880. The line was built with incredible speed
and was completed in November 1885.
Although the engineering was superb, the financing proved inadequate.
The older Northern Pacific Railway went bankrupt in 1883, just
before the CPR needed more funds. When Macdonald declared that
the money could not be raised, one of his advisors quickly reminded
him that "The day the Canadian Pacific busts, the Conservative
Party busts the day after." The government and the railway
were both saved by the second métis rebellion in 1885.
The speed with which the troops arrived via the railway gave
Macdonald the necessary arguments to persuade his cabinet and
Parliament to reduce previous railroad debts and to make a further
loan to the CPR.
The second métis rebellion had, in fact, been partly caused
by the CPR. The métis themselves had wiped out the buffalo.
The railroad was bringing settlers to destroy what little remained
of their old way of life. Louis Riel was invited by the métis
to return to western Canada to set up a provisional government.
Troops were brought up on the CPR, the rebellion was easily crushed,
and Riel was hanged.
Meanwhile, in 1882, the Conservatives had won another election.
Macdonald himself ran and won in Lennox and Addington County,
Ontario. He visited England again in 1884 to participate in discussions
with the British government regarding a more independent status
for Canada. Although Macdonald declared in one of his last speeches
that "A British subject I was born, a British subject I
will die," he believed that Canada could be a "powerful
auxiliary to the Empire." His view of Canada as enjoying
equal status with Britain was expressed in his appointment in
1880 of a Canadian High Commissioner in London to aid western
settlement and to deal with other Canadian concerns.
Macdonald's settlement program was not faring well. Canada was
again in the throes of an economic depression, people were emigrating
from every province to the United States, and there was an increasing
dissatisfaction at the slow pace of national growth.
In spite of these circumstances, Macdonald managed to win the
election of 1887, although his victory was achieved through a
variety of dubious political methods that included bribery and
promises that were unlikely to be kept. He was so successful
that, despite Riel's execution, even Québec gave a slim
majority to the Conservatives. Macdonald himself won in his old
constituency of Kingston.
Even more surprising, the Conservatives succeeded again in 1891,
in spite of a series of scandals. The Conservatives had done
little in the intervening years, and the campaign was fought
on the slogan, "The old man, the old flag, and the old policy."
Macdonald, although 76 years old, campaigned until he died in
1891. His legacy to his country was the structure of a transcontinental
dominion.
"Macdonald, Sir John Alexander,"
Microsoft(R) Encarta(R) 97 Encyclopedia. (c) 1993-1996
Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
Sir John A. Macdonald's Living Statue
keeping up the spirit of the Father of Confederation
in the 21st century!
Canadian Exhibition - Toronto, Ontario!
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