William Aberhart: Difference between revisions
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{{short description|Premier of Alberta (1935–1943)}} |
{{short description|Premier of Alberta (1935–1943)}} |
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{{Use Canadian English|date=June 2020}} |
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{{Infobox officeholder |
{{Infobox officeholder |
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| image = W aberhart.jpg |
| image = W aberhart.jpg |
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| alt = A bald man in a suit with round spectacles |
| alt = A bald man in a suit with round spectacles |
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| caption = |
| caption = Aberhart in 1937 |
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| order = 7th [[Premier of Alberta]] |
| order = 7th [[Premier of Alberta]] |
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| term_start = September 3, 1935 |
| term_start = September 3, 1935 |
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| death_date = {{death date and age |1943|05|23|1878|12|30}} |
| death_date = {{death date and age |1943|05|23|1878|12|30}} |
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| death_place = [[Vancouver, British Columbia]], Canada |
| death_place = [[Vancouver, British Columbia]], Canada |
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| resting_place = [[Forest Lawn Memorial Park (Burnaby |
| resting_place = [[Forest Lawn Memorial Park (Burnaby)]], Canada |
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| party = [[Social Credit Party of Alberta|Social Credit]] |
| party = [[Social Credit Party of Alberta|Social Credit]] |
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| residence = [[Calgary]], Alberta, Canada |
| residence = [[Calgary]], Alberta, Canada |
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| spouse = Jessie Flatt |
| spouse = Jessie Flatt |
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| children = 2 |
| children = 2 |
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| religion = [[Christian]] |
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| signature = William Aberhart Signature-.svg |
| signature = William Aberhart Signature-.svg |
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}} |
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⚫ | '''William Aberhart''' (December 30, 1878 – May 23, 1943), also known as "'''Bible Bill'''" for his radio sermons about the [[Bible]], was a Canadian politician and the seventh [[premier of Alberta]] from 1935 to his death in 1943.<ref>{{cite encyclopedia |last=Elliot |first=David R. |date=February 14, 2008 |url=https://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca/en/article/william-aberhart |title=William Aberhart |encyclopedia=[[Canadian Encyclopedia]] |publisher=[[Historica Canada]] |edition=online |access-date=September 24, 2013}}</ref> He was the founder and first leader of the [[Alberta Social Credit Party]], which believed the [[Great Depression in Canada|Great Depression]] was caused by ordinary people not having enough to spend. Therefore, Aberhart argued that the government should give each Albertan $25 per month to spend to stimulate the economy, by providing needed purchasing power to allow needy customers to buy from waiting businesses. |
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⚫ | During his premiership, Aberhart campaigned for and instituted several anti-poverty and debt relief programs, and other governmental reforms, such as consolidation of Alberta's numerous small school districts into centralized school divisions, and natural resources conservation. His attempts at banking reform met with less success, facing strong opposition from the federal government, the courts, privately owned newspapers and a coalition of the Liberal and Conservative parties. Aberhart's government did successfully establish the Alberta Treasury Branches (now [[ATB Financial]]), a government-owned financial institution to provide an alternative to existing banks, which continues to operate as a [[Crown corporations of Canada|Crown corporation]] of the Alberta government. |
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⚫ | '''William Aberhart''' (December 30, 1878 – May 23, 1943), also known as ''' |
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⚫ | During his premiership, Aberhart campaigned for and instituted several anti-poverty and debt relief programs, and other governmental reforms, such as consolidation of Alberta's numerous small school districts into centralized school divisions, and natural resources conservation. His attempts at banking reform met with less success, facing strong opposition from the federal government, the courts, privately |
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== Early life == |
== Early life == |
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===Childhood, education, and family=== |
===Childhood, education, and family=== |
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William Aberhart was born December 30, 1878, in Kippen, Ontario (now part of [[Bluewater, Ontario]]) to William (c. 1844 – 1910)<ref>{{cite book | |
William Aberhart was born December 30, 1878, in Kippen, Ontario (now part of [[Bluewater, Ontario]]) to William (c. 1844 – 1910)<ref>{{cite book |last1=Perry |first1=Sandra E. |last2=Craig |first2=Jessica J. |title=The Mantle of Leadership: Premiers of the Northwest Territories and Alberta |year=2006 |publisher=Legislative Assembly of Alberta |location=Edmonton, Alberta |isbn=0-9689217-2-8 |url-access=registration |url=https://archive.org/details/centennialseries03perr }}, p. 409</ref> and Louisa (c. 1850–1944){{sfn|Perry|Craig|2006|p=410}} (née Pepper) Aberhart.<ref name="Elliott_Miller_Biography_1987"/>{{rp|3}} William Aberhart Sr. had immigrated to Canada from Germany with his family at the age of seven, while Louisa Pepper was born in [[Perth County, Ontario]].<ref name="Elliott_Miller_Biography_1987"/>{{rp|2}} Historian Harold Schultz describes the Aberharts as "prosperous", while biographers David Elliott and Iris Miller says they "lived better than the average family".<ref name="Elliott_Miller_Biography_1987"/>{{rp|3}}<ref name="CHR_Schultz_1964">{{cite journal |last=Schultz |first=Harold J. |year=1964 |title=Portrait of a Premier: William Aberhart |journal=[[Canadian Historical Review]] |volume=45 |issue=3 |pages=185–228 |publisher=[[University of Toronto Press]] |location=Toronto, Ontario |issn=0008-3755 |doi=10.3138/chr-045-03-01 |s2cid=162639596 }}, p. 185</ref> The fourth of eight children, William Aberhart Jr. delivered milk to his father's customers before school each day.<ref name="Elliott_Miller_Biography_1987"/>{{rp|4}} At school, he was a hard-working but average student.<ref name="Elliott_Miller_Biography_1987"/>{{rp|5}}<ref>{{cite book |last=Barr|first=John J. |title=The Dynasty: The Rise and Fall of Social Credit in Alberta|publisher=McClelland and Stewart Limited|year=1974|location=Toronto, Ontario |isbn=0-7710-1015-X }}, p. 37</ref> Mathematics was one of his strengths, though his approach involved more [[rote learning]] than reasoning. Elliott and Miller suggest that this tendency stayed with him his entire life, and that he "never really acquired an appreciation for inductive intellectual analysis".<ref name="Elliott_Miller_Biography_1987"/>{{rp|5}} Aberhart was not a social child.<ref name="Elliott_Miller_Biography_1987"/>{{rp|6}} Though he excelled at [[soccer]],{{sfn|Barr|1974|p=37}} he generally preferred solitary pursuits such as reading or teaching himself to play musical instruments.<ref name="CHR_Schultz_1964"/>{{rp|186}}<ref name="Elliott_Miller_Biography_1987"/>{{rp|6–7}} |
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In 1896, Aberhart attended three months of model school in [[Mitchell, Ontario|Mitchell]]. |
In 1896, Aberhart attended three months of model school in [[Mitchell, Ontario|Mitchell]]. Although this training qualified him to work as a schoolteacher, he instead enrolled in business college in [[Chatham, Ontario|Chatham]], from which he withdrew after four months of successful study.<ref name="Elliott_Miller_Biography_1987"/>{{rp|6}} In 1897–98, Aberhart attended Seaforth Collegiate Institute, where he was nicknamed "Whitey" (for his blond hair) and broadened his athletic prowess to include the [[long jump]], [[shot put]], [[100-yard dash]], [[high jump]], [[cycle sport|cycling]], and [[Canadian football|football]].<ref name="Elliott_Miller_Biography_1987"/>{{rp|6–7}} |
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On July 29, 1902, Aberhart married Jessie Flatt, whom he had met in 1901 at a football game.<ref name="Elliott_Miller_Biography_1987"/>{{rp|14–15}} A daughter, Khona Louise Aberhart, was born in the winter of 1903, and a second, Ola Janet Aberhart, followed in August 1905.<ref name="Elliott_Miller_Biography_1987"/>{{rp|15}} |
On July 29, 1902, Aberhart married Jessie Flatt, whom he had met in 1901 at a football game.<ref name="Elliott_Miller_Biography_1987"/>{{rp|14–15}} A daughter, Khona Louise Aberhart, was born in the winter of 1903, and a second, Ola Janet Aberhart, followed in August 1905.<ref name="Elliott_Miller_Biography_1987"/>{{rp|15}} |
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On July 20, 1910, William Aberhart Sr. died in an accident at a pharmacy owned by his son (William Jr.'s brother) Charles. |
On July 20, 1910, William Aberhart Sr. died in an accident at a pharmacy owned by his son (William Jr.'s brother) Charles. [[Prohibition in Canada|Prohibition]] was in effect, but pharmacists were permitted to provide alcohol for "medicinal purposes". Charles kept a bottle of whiskey for William Sr. to drink whenever he was in the store. One day a clerk rearranged the bottles, and the illiterate William Sr. took a swallow of [[carbolic acid]]; he died within minutes. William Jr., by now in Calgary, did not make the trip east to his father's funeral.<ref name="Elliott_Miller_Biography_1987"/>{{rp|23}} Louisa Aberhart died February 20, 1944, outliving her son, William Aberhart Jr., by less than a year.<ref>{{cite web |title=William Aberhart Family History |publisher=Alberta Family Histories Society |url=http://www.afhs.ab.ca/data/premier/wa_famhist.html |access-date=March 11, 2010 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100917182438/http://afhs.ab.ca/data/premier/wa_famhist.html |archive-date=September 17, 2010 |url-status=dead |df=mdy-all }}</ref> |
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⚫ | In the fall of 1901 Aberhart was hired as a teacher at the Central Public School in [[Brantford, Ontario|Brantford]], for which he was paid $60 per month.<ref name="Elliott_Miller_Biography_1987"/>{{rp|11–12}} He fast won a reputation as a strict disciplinarian: he addressed his students by number rather than name and was liberal in his use of [[Strapping (punishment)|the strap]]. |
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[[File:William Aberhart Youth.jpg|thumb|upright|Aberhart as a young man]] |
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⚫ | In the fall of 1901 Aberhart was hired as a teacher at the Central Public School in [[Brantford, Ontario|Brantford]], for which he was paid $60 per month.<ref name="Elliott_Miller_Biography_1987"/>{{rp|11–12}} He fast won a reputation as a strict disciplinarian: he addressed his students by number rather than name and was liberal in his use of [[Strapping (punishment)|the strap]]. By his own account in a 1903 essay, he viewed the classroom as a battlefield, and admired [[Oliver Cromwell]]'s military organization. While his tactics divided his students—some loved him, while others recounted that "he did everything he could to break the spirit of a child"—his supervisors gave him uniformly positive reviews.<ref name="Elliott_Miller_Biography_1987"/>{{rp|15}} |
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His school's principal died in 1905, and Aberhart was selected to replace him; his salary increased to $1,000 per year.<ref name="Elliott_Miller_Biography_1987"/>{{rp|15}} This figure had reached $1,200 by 1910 when, in response to glowing reviews from his colleagues, the [[Calgary Board of Education]] offered him a principalship at $1,400 per year. In response to a petition from his staff and students that this offer be matched by Brantford, Aberhart was offered a raise to $1,300; he declined it, and moved to Calgary that spring.<ref name="Elliott_Miller_Biography_1987"/>{{rp|20}} His family followed later, after he purchased a two-storey wooden house and Khona finished her academic year in Brantford.<ref name="Elliott_Miller_Biography_1987"/>{{rp|23–24}} 1910 Calgary was a frontier town that smelled of horse manure and in which public drunkenness was common; though Aberhart's sensibilities were less shocked by this than his wife's were, he also had to make some adjustments: in Brantford he had always attended church in a silk [[top hat]] and [[frock coat]], but he quickly abandoned this custom after discovering that he was the only one in Calgary to do so.<ref name="Elliott_Miller_Biography_1987"/>{{rp|23}} |
His school's principal died in 1905, and Aberhart was selected to replace him; his salary increased to $1,000 per year.<ref name="Elliott_Miller_Biography_1987"/>{{rp|15}} This figure had reached $1,200 by 1910 when, in response to glowing reviews from his colleagues, the [[Calgary Board of Education]] offered him a principalship at $1,400 per year. In response to a petition from his staff and students that this offer be matched by Brantford, Aberhart was offered a raise to $1,300; he declined it, and moved to Calgary that spring.<ref name="Elliott_Miller_Biography_1987"/>{{rp|20}} His family followed later, after he purchased a two-storey wooden house and Khona finished her academic year in Brantford.<ref name="Elliott_Miller_Biography_1987"/>{{rp|23–24}} 1910 Calgary was a frontier town that smelled of horse manure and in which public drunkenness was common; though Aberhart's sensibilities were less shocked by this than his wife's were, he also had to make some adjustments: in Brantford he had always attended church in a silk [[top hat]] and [[frock coat]], but he quickly abandoned this custom after discovering that he was the only one in Calgary to do so.<ref name="Elliott_Miller_Biography_1987"/>{{rp|23}} |
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Elliott and Miller write that Aberhart took a less rigid approach to discipline at Crescent Heights than he had in Ontario,<ref name="Elliott_Miller_Biography_1987"/>{{rp|44}} though Schultz says that as principal he was "authoritarian in manner and a strict disciplinarian".<ref name="CHR_Schultz_1964"/>{{rp|187}} His love of organization persisted,{{sfn|Barr|1974|p=37}}<ref name="Elliott_Miller_Biography_1987"/>{{rp|44}} and his penchant for it enhanced his reputation as "an able administrator".<ref name="CHR_Schultz_1964"/>{{rp|187}} Crescent Height's students scored very well on departmental examinations, though some members of the school board believed that he achieved this at least partly by culling weaker students with a preliminary qualifying examination.<ref name="Elliott_Miller_Biography_1987"/>{{rp|46}} |
Elliott and Miller write that Aberhart took a less rigid approach to discipline at Crescent Heights than he had in Ontario,<ref name="Elliott_Miller_Biography_1987"/>{{rp|44}} though Schultz says that as principal he was "authoritarian in manner and a strict disciplinarian".<ref name="CHR_Schultz_1964"/>{{rp|187}} His love of organization persisted,{{sfn|Barr|1974|p=37}}<ref name="Elliott_Miller_Biography_1987"/>{{rp|44}} and his penchant for it enhanced his reputation as "an able administrator".<ref name="CHR_Schultz_1964"/>{{rp|187}} Crescent Height's students scored very well on departmental examinations, though some members of the school board believed that he achieved this at least partly by culling weaker students with a preliminary qualifying examination.<ref name="Elliott_Miller_Biography_1987"/>{{rp|46}} |
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One way Aberhart applied his organizational prowess was in creating one of Calgary's first and largest [[parent–teacher association]]s, which had an average of two hundred parents attend each meeting; Aberhart had a generally good relationship with parents.<ref name="Elliott_Miller_Biography_1987"/>{{rp|45}} His standing with his staff was more mixed: he had a habit of "talking down" to them, dominated the school to the point that teachers were left with little initiative, and, as Elliott and Miller put it, "never entered the staff room except to issue an order".<ref name="CHR_Schultz_1964"/>{{rp|187}}<ref name="Elliott_Miller_Biography_1987"/>{{rp|46}} Many of his teachers, while respecting his abilities an administrator, thought very little of him as a man, and some believed that his domineering approach stemmed from a fear of people smarter than him.<ref name="Elliott_Miller_Biography_1987"/>{{rp|47}} In 1919, eight Crescent Heights teachers wrote the school board requesting an investigation into Aberhart's work; the resulting inspection led to the transfer of three male teachers—with whom Aberhart had a particularly poor rapport—to other schools, and stated that persisting problems would lead to a request for Aberhart's resignation.<ref name="Elliott_Miller_Biography_1987"/>{{rp|46}} A follow-up investigation two years later found a substantial improvement in conditions and reported favourably on Aberhart's abilities.<ref name="Elliott_Miller_Biography_1987"/>{{rp|47}} Despite this uneven relationship, Aberhart was not all together closed-minded, and would entertain—and sometimes even be convinced by—arguments from his staff.<ref name="Elliott_Miller_Biography_1987"/>{{rp|44}}{{sfn|Barr|1974|p=38}} |
One way Aberhart applied his organizational prowess was in creating one of Calgary's first and largest [[parent–teacher association]]s, which had an average of two hundred parents attend each meeting; Aberhart had a generally good relationship with parents.<ref name="Elliott_Miller_Biography_1987"/>{{rp|45}} His standing with his staff was more mixed: he had a habit of "talking down" to them, dominated the school to the point that teachers were left with little initiative, and, as Elliott and Miller put it, "never entered the staff room except to issue an order".<ref name="CHR_Schultz_1964"/>{{rp|187}}<ref name="Elliott_Miller_Biography_1987"/>{{rp|46}} Many of his teachers, while respecting his abilities as an administrator, thought very little of him as a man, and some believed that his domineering approach stemmed from a fear of people smarter than him.<ref name="Elliott_Miller_Biography_1987"/>{{rp|47}} In 1919, eight Crescent Heights teachers wrote the school board requesting an investigation into Aberhart's work; the resulting inspection led to the transfer of three male teachers—with whom Aberhart had a particularly poor rapport—to other schools, and stated that persisting problems would lead to a request for Aberhart's resignation.<ref name="Elliott_Miller_Biography_1987"/>{{rp|46}} A follow-up investigation two years later found a substantial improvement in conditions and reported favourably on Aberhart's abilities.<ref name="Elliott_Miller_Biography_1987"/>{{rp|47}} Despite this uneven relationship, Aberhart was not all together closed-minded, and would entertain—and sometimes even be convinced by—arguments from his staff.<ref name="Elliott_Miller_Biography_1987"/>{{rp|44}}{{sfn|Barr|1974|p=38}} |
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Besides his administrative duties, Aberhart taught English and math.<ref name="Elliott_Miller_Biography_1987"/>{{rp|44}}<ref name="CHR_Schultz_1964"/>{{rp|187}} True to form, in doing so he emphasized rote memorization at the expense of independent reasoning, to the point that one of his teachers once likened him to a dog trainer.{{sfn|Barr|1974|p=37}}<ref name="Elliott_Miller_Biography_1987"/>{{rp|44}} He cared for his students and provided extensive extra tutoring, especially for students in whom he saw a genuine interest in learning the material.<ref name="CHR_Schultz_1964"/>{{rp|187}}<ref name="Elliott_Miller_Biography_1987"/>{{rp|44–45}} Outside of the classroom, he applied his talents to organizing picnics and games,<ref name="CHR_Schultz_1964"/>{{rp|187}} and in 1922 organized an elected [[student council]] years before the concept became widespread in Calgary.{{sfn|Barr|1974|p=38}} When some students wanted the school to purchase a [[movie projector]] not provided for in the school's budget, Aberhart organized a company into which students could buy for ten cents per share; the company put on movies for which it charged admission, and at the end of its first year of operation it declared a [[dividend]] of 25 cents per share. He urged his students to adopt four axioms he followed in his own life: "be enthusiastic, be ambitious, develop a distinctive personality, [and] have a hobby and ride it hard."<ref name="CHR_Schultz_1964"/>{{rp|187}} |
Besides his administrative duties, Aberhart taught English and math.<ref name="Elliott_Miller_Biography_1987"/>{{rp|44}}<ref name="CHR_Schultz_1964"/>{{rp|187}} True to form, in doing so he emphasized rote memorization at the expense of independent reasoning, to the point that one of his teachers once likened him to a dog trainer.{{sfn|Barr|1974|p=37}}<ref name="Elliott_Miller_Biography_1987"/>{{rp|44}} He cared for his students and provided extensive extra tutoring, especially for students in whom he saw a genuine interest in learning the material.<ref name="CHR_Schultz_1964"/>{{rp|187}}<ref name="Elliott_Miller_Biography_1987"/>{{rp|44–45}} Outside of the classroom, he applied his talents to organizing picnics and games,<ref name="CHR_Schultz_1964"/>{{rp|187}} and in 1922 organized an elected [[student council]] years before the concept became widespread in Calgary.{{sfn|Barr|1974|p=38}} When some students wanted the school to purchase a [[movie projector]] not provided for in the school's budget, Aberhart organized a company into which students could buy for ten cents per share; the company put on movies for which it charged admission, and at the end of its first year of operation it declared a [[dividend]] of 25 cents per share. He urged his students to adopt four axioms he followed in his own life: "be enthusiastic, be ambitious, develop a distinctive personality, [and] have a hobby and ride it hard."<ref name="CHR_Schultz_1964"/>{{rp|187}} |
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In the assessment of John Barr, a Social Credit staffer years after Aberhart's death who later wrote one of the first histories of the party's years in power, "Aberhart generally had the respect and admiration of a broad following of parents, teachers, and students."{{sfn|Barr|1974|p=38}} Schultz states that the only area in which all 61 people he interviewed in researching Aberhart's career agreed was that he was an excellent high school teacher.<ref name="CHR_Schultz_1964"/>{{rp|187}} |
In the assessment of John Barr, a Social Credit staffer years after Aberhart's death who later wrote one of the first histories of the party's years in power, "Aberhart generally had the respect and admiration of a broad following of parents, teachers, and students."{{sfn|Barr|1974|p=38}} Schultz states that the only area in which all 61 people he interviewed in researching Aberhart's career agreed was that he was an excellent high school teacher.<ref name="CHR_Schultz_1964"/>{{rp|187}} |
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==Ministry== |
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===Early religious views and adoption of Dispensationalism=== |
===Early religious views and adoption of Dispensationalism=== |
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While in Brantford, Aberhart studied at Zion Presbyterian church,<ref name="CHR_Schultz_1964"/>{{rp|186}} where he became interested in [[Biblical prophecy]], which in turn led him to [[Dispensationalism]]. Dispensationalism held that history was divided into seven dispensations, during each of which God made a [[Covenant (biblical)|covenant]] with man, and during each of which man broke the covenant.<ref name="Elliott_Miller_Biography_1987"/>{{rp|12}} That the terms of the covenant were different in each dispensation resolved Aberhart's earlier concerns about the Bible's internal inconsistencies.<ref name="Elliott_Miller_Biography_1987"/>{{rp|9}} His views were heavily influenced by a correspondence course he took offered by American Dispensationalist [[Cyrus Scofield]]; Elliott and Miller speculate that such a course would have appealed to Aberhart by reducing "difficult theological problems to a matter of memorizing questions and answers".<ref name="Elliott_Miller_Biography_1987"/>{{rp|3}} |
While in Brantford, Aberhart studied at Zion Presbyterian church,<ref name="CHR_Schultz_1964"/>{{rp|186}} where he became interested in [[Biblical prophecy]], which in turn led him to [[Dispensationalism]]. Dispensationalism held that history was divided into seven dispensations, during each of which God made a [[Covenant (biblical)|covenant]] with man, and during each of which man broke the covenant.<ref name="Elliott_Miller_Biography_1987"/>{{rp|12}} That the terms of the covenant were different in each dispensation resolved Aberhart's earlier concerns about the Bible's internal inconsistencies.<ref name="Elliott_Miller_Biography_1987"/>{{rp|9}} His views were heavily influenced by a correspondence course he took offered by American Dispensationalist [[Cyrus Scofield]]; Elliott and Miller speculate that such a course would have appealed to Aberhart by reducing "difficult theological problems to a matter of memorizing questions and answers".<ref name="Elliott_Miller_Biography_1987"/>{{rp|3}} |
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⚫ | Aberhart had aspired to take ministerial training at the Presbyterian Knox College Divinity School, but the church in Brantford was reluctant to take on the support of both him and his family in the four-year training period. He became fascinated with prophetical teaching in the Bible and studied a correspondence course by Cyrus Scofield. He had been introduced to this system while attending a men's Bible Class at Zion Presbyterian, taught by William Nichol, an elderly physician.<ref>{{cite book |first1=L. P. V. |last1=Johnson |first2=Ola |last2=McNutt |title=Aberhart of Alberta |publisher=Institute of Applied Art |date=1970 |pages=26–27 }}</ref> |
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In 1910, Aberhart accepted a position as principal of Alexandra School in [[Calgary]], Alberta. His initial Bible Study Teaching in Calgary commenced at the Grace Presbyterian Church at the Young Men's Bible Class. Within a few weeks attendance was over 100 and he attracted the attendance of the senior minister Dr. Esler, but his views on prophecy did not jibe with senior minister's reformed beliefs and his teaching privileges were cancelled. He then moved on to teach successively at the Wesley and Trinity Methodist Churches.{{sfn|Johnson|McNutt|1970|pp=50-51}} |
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⚫ | Aberhart had aspired to take ministerial training at the Presbyterian Knox College Divinity School, but the church in Brantford was reluctant to take on the support of both him and his family in the four-year training period. He became fascinated with prophetical teaching in the Bible and studied a correspondence course by |
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In |
In 1915, he became an unpaid pastor of Westbourne Baptist Church in Calgary.<ref>John Gordon Stackhouse, ''Canadian Evangelicalism in the Twentieth Century: An Introduction to Its Character'', Regent College Publishing, Canada, 1998, p. 37</ref> In 1918, he founded a Bible study group in the church, which grew in attendance over the years. In 1920 he was baptized by immersion.<ref>William H. Brackney, ''Historical Dictionary of the Baptists'', Rowman & Littlefield, USA, 2021, p. 9</ref> In 1925, he broadcast his Sunday sermons on the [[radio station]] CFCN, which allowed him to broadcast his prophetic preaching to listeners throughout the Canadian prairies and part of the northern United States. In 1927 he made the decision to terminate the church's affiliation with the [[Baptist Union of Western Canada]] due to theological differences with the teachings given at the union college.<ref name="John Gordon Stackhouse 1998, p. 41">John Gordon Stackhouse, ''Canadian Evangelicalism in the Twentieth Century: An Introduction to Its Character'', Regent College Publishing, Canada, 1998, p. 41</ref> In 1927, he founded the [[Calgary Prophetic Bible Institute]] in a new building.<ref>Randall Herbert Balmer, ''Encyclopedia of Evangelicalism: Revised and expanded edition'', Baylor University Press, USA, 2004, p. 1</ref> The institute building also housed the Westbourne Baptist Church. In 1929, a section of church members who disagreed with his beliefs about the need for a [[baptism of the Holy Spirit]] separate from conversion, decided to return to the old building, prompting Aberhart to found Bible Institute Baptist Church.<ref name="John Gordon Stackhouse 1998, p. 41"/> Towards the end of his life [[British Israelism]] became increasingly central to his theology.<ref>{{cite book |last=Rennie |first=Bradford J. |title=Alberta Premiers of the Twentieth Century |date=2004 |publisher=Canadian Plains Research Center, University of Regina |location=Regina, Saskatchewan |page=144 |url={{google books|naghmtnXQoYC|page=144|plainurl=yes}} |isbn=978-0-8897-7151-2 |access-date=September 28, 2015}}</ref> British Israelism had been an element of his theology from an early stage, but assumed further importance following the [[1939 royal tour of Canada]] where he spoke with King [[George VI]] on the topic.<ref name="Elliott_Miller_Biography_1987"/>{{rp|284}} |
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==Early political involvement==<!-- This section is linked from [[Monarchy in Canada]] --> |
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Aberhart became interested in politics during the [[Great Depression in Canada]], a time which was especially harsh on Albertan and Saskatchewan farmers. Particularly, he was drawn to the [[Social Credit]] theories of Major [[C. H. Douglas]], a British engineer. From 1932 to 1935, Aberhart lobbied for the governing political party, the [[United Farmers of Alberta]], to adopt these theories, but it never did. |
Aberhart became interested in politics during the [[Great Depression in Canada]], a time which was especially harsh on Albertan and Saskatchewan farmers. Particularly, he was drawn to the [[Social Credit]] theories of Major [[C. H. Douglas]], a British engineer. From 1932 to 1935, Aberhart lobbied for the governing political party, the [[United Farmers of Alberta]], to adopt these theories, but it never did. |
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It is doubtful that Aberhart fully understood the theories himself.<ref>{{cite report |first=C.H. |last=Douglas |work=First interim report on the possibilities of the application of social credit principles to the Province of Alberta |title=Possible Social Credit in Alberta |date=June 1, 1935 |url=http://jotter2.files.s3.amazonaws.com/2408517?response-content-disposition=inline;filename=possible_social_credit_in_alberta.pdf&response-content-type=application/pdf&AWSAccessKeyId=AKIAIHZDCFOYSEK3PO3Q&Expires=1443471892&Signature=yjsmE3wMzCa8gKjCDFsBklPhltI%3D |access-date=September 28, 2015 }}{{dead link|date=September 2017}}</ref> The basis of Douglas's A+B theorem is that prices rise faster than incomes when regarded as a flow, and individuals' purchasing power should be supplemented through issuance of new credits that have not derived from the productive system. After Aberhart's lobbying of the United Farmers to adopt Social Credit principles was unsuccessful |
It is doubtful that Aberhart fully understood the theories himself.<ref>{{cite report |first=C.H. |last=Douglas |work=First interim report on the possibilities of the application of social credit principles to the Province of Alberta |title=Possible Social Credit in Alberta |date=June 1, 1935 |url=http://jotter2.files.s3.amazonaws.com/2408517?response-content-disposition=inline;filename=possible_social_credit_in_alberta.pdf&response-content-type=application/pdf&AWSAccessKeyId=AKIAIHZDCFOYSEK3PO3Q&Expires=1443471892&Signature=yjsmE3wMzCa8gKjCDFsBklPhltI%3D |access-date=September 28, 2015 }}{{dead link|date=September 2017}}</ref> The basis of Douglas's A+B theorem is that prices rise faster than incomes when regarded as a flow, and individuals' purchasing power should be supplemented through issuance of new credits that have not derived from the productive system. After Aberhart's lobbying of the United Farmers to adopt Social Credit principles was unsuccessful, he helped found the [[Social Credit Party of Alberta]]. |
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==Premier of Alberta (1935–1943)== |
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⚫ | |||
[[File:William Aberhart and his Cabinet.jpg|thumb|right|Aberhart and his cabinet in 1935]] |
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===Electoral record=== |
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⚫ | Not even the [[Socreds]] had expected to win the election. Indeed, its expectations were so low that it had not named a formal leader during the campaign. The party was now tasked with selecting a leader who would become the province's new premier. Aberhart was the obvious choice, as he had been the party's founder and guiding force. He initially said he |
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⚫ | The Social Credit Party won the [[1935 Alberta general election|1935 provincial election]] by a landslide with over 54% of the popular vote and all but seven of the 63 seats in the legislature.<ref>{{cite encyclopedia |editor-last1=Thorne |editor-first1=J.O. |editor-last2=Collocott |editor-first2=T.C. |title=[[Chambers Biographical Dictionary]] |edition=illustrated, revised |date=1984 |page=4 |publisher=Chambers |isbn=0-550-18022-2}}</ref> |
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⚫ | Not even the [[Socreds]] had expected to win the election. Indeed, its expectations were so low that it had not named a formal leader during the campaign. The party was now tasked with selecting a leader who would become the province's new premier. Aberhart was the obvious choice, as he had been the party's founder and guiding force. He initially said he did not want the job, but was finally prevailed to accept it.{{citation needed|date=October 2023}} |
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⚫ | He was |
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⚫ | He was sworn in as premier on September 3 (11 days after his August 22 victory). However, he was not yet a member of the legislature. The Social Credit MLA for [[Okotoks-High River]], [[William Morrison (Alberta politician)|William Morrison]], resigned to give Aberhart a chance to get a seat, per standard practice in the Westminster system when a leader or cabinet minister does not have a seat.{{citation needed|date=October 2023}} |
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⚫ | |||
⚫ | |||
Aberhart served as his own [[Education in Alberta|Minister of Education]] and, starting in 1937, [[Attorney General]]. |
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⚫ | Aberhart served as premier and as his own [[Education in Alberta|minister of education]] and, starting in 1937, [[Attorney General]]. Aberhart's government was re-elected in the [[1940 Alberta general election|1940 election]] with a somewhat reduced mandate, with Aberhart being elected to a Calgary seat.{{citation needed|date=October 2023}} |
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⚫ | |||
===Policy=== |
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⚫ | [[Lieutenant-Governor of Alberta|Lieutenant Governor]] [[John C. Bowen]] refused to give [[ |
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[[File:William Aberhart2.jpg|thumb|upright|Portrait of Aberhart as premier]] |
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⚫ | Aberhart's government did not implement much of the Social Credit policies promised in the party's election platform, because of the province's very poor financial position in the depths of the Depression. The federal government's opposition to Social Credit was a significant block to Aberhart's policy goals. The federal government has jurisdiction over Canadian currency and banks, under the ''[[British North America Act, 1867]]''. However, there was no constitutional barrier to Alberta producing its own currency, which Aberhart's government did to a limited degree with its [[prosperity certificates]]. Aberhart did threaten the power of private banks with his government's extension of the UFA government's foreclosure moratorium and mandatory debt adjustment. But a law to tax banks was overturned on constitutional grounds. Later, the government started its own banks, which carry on as the Alberta Treasury Branch ([[ATB Financial]]). |
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Aberhart instituted a variety of relief programs to help people out of poverty, as well as public works programs and a debt relief program that froze some debt collections and mortgage foreclosures. This, like [[Tommy Douglas]]' similar program in Saskatchewan, was later overturned in the mid-1940s by the Supreme Court, although it aided people for a number of years during and (for a short time) after the Great Depression. |
Aberhart instituted a variety of relief programs to help people out of poverty, as well as public works programs and a debt relief program that froze some debt collections and mortgage foreclosures. This, like [[Tommy Douglas]]' similar program in Saskatchewan, was later overturned in the mid-1940s by the Supreme Court, although it aided people for a number of years during and (for a short time) after the Great Depression. |
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Alberta's Social Credit government brought in legislation under which an MLA could be recalled by a portion of |
Alberta's Social Credit government brought in legislation under which an MLA could be recalled by a portion of their constituents. Aberhart's own constituents, including out-of-power UFA farmers and many oilworkers working for U.S. oil companies threatened by Aberhart's Natural Resources Conservation legislation, gathered signatures for Aberhart's own recall. He thus became the first Canadian politician to be threatened with recall from office. Aberhart's government retroactively repealed the recall legislation rather than have Aberhart forced to give up his seat.<ref>{{cite journal |first=Don |last=Rowat |title=Our Referendums are not Direct Democracy |journal=[[Canadian Parliamentary Review]] |date=1998 |volume=21 |issue=3 |pages=25–27 |url=http://www.revparl.ca/21/3/21n3_98e_Rowat.pdf}}</ref> |
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In keeping with his evangelical views, Aberhart added a heavy dose of [[social conservatism]] to Major Douglas's ideas. Most notably, he enacted very tight restrictions on the sale of alcohol. Indeed, the only stricter law in Canada at the time was in [[Prince Edward Island]], where the sale of alcohol remained completely banned until 1948. Well into the 1960s, commercial airlines could not serve alcohol while flying over Alberta. |
In keeping with his evangelical views, Aberhart added a heavy dose of [[social conservatism]] to Major Douglas's ideas. Most notably, he enacted very tight restrictions on the sale of alcohol. Indeed, the only stricter law in Canada at the time was in [[Prince Edward Island]], where the sale of alcohol remained completely banned until 1948. Well into the 1960s, commercial airlines could not serve alcohol while flying over Alberta. |
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⚫ | Although Aberhart was unable to gain control of Alberta's banks, his government gained a foothold in the province's financial industry by creating the [[Alberta Treasury Branches]] in 1938. Its operations included special credit given for those who bought made-in-Alberta goods. ATB has become Aberhart's legacy, operating as an orthodox [[financial institution]] and [[Crown corporation]]. |
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⚫ | By late 1937, relations with the |
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===Conflict with Lieutenant Governor=== |
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⚫ | |||
[[File:Aberhart, George VI and Queen Elizabeth in Edmonton 1939. A6557.jpg|thumb|right|Aberhart (speaking) welcoming King [[George VI]] and Queen [[Elizabeth Bowes-Lyon|Elizabeth]] to Alberta in May 1939]] |
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⚫ | [[Lieutenant-Governor of Alberta|Lieutenant Governor]] [[John C. Bowen]] refused to give [[royal assent]] to three government bills in 1937. Two of the bills would have put the province's banks under the control of the provincial government, while a third, the ''[[Accurate News and Information Act]]'', would have forced newspapers to print government rebuttals to stories the provincial [[Cabinet (government)|cabinet]] deemed "inaccurate". All three bills were later declared unconstitutional by the [[Supreme Court of Canada]] and the [[Judicial Committee of the Privy Council]]. For its leadership in the fight against the latter act, in 1938 the ''[[Edmonton Journal]]'' was awarded a [[1938 Pulitzer Prize#Journalism awards|Pulitzer Prize special citation and bronze plaque]], the first time a special citation was awarded outside the United States, while 95 other newspapers including the ''[[Calgary Herald]]'', the ''Red Deer News'', ''[[Lethbridge Herald]]'' and the province's weekly newspapers were recognized with engraved certificates. |
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⚫ | By late 1937, relations with the lieutenant governor became so strained that Bowen even threatened to dismiss Aberhart's government, which would have been an extraordinary use of his [[reserve powers]]. An analogous situation occurred in 1932 in Australia between [[Jack Lang (Australian politician)|Jack Lang]] and Sir [[Philip Game]], the premier and governor, respectively, of [[New South Wales]]. However, Bowen did not follow through on his threat due in part to Social Credit's immense popularity with the people. Had he dismissed Aberhart, it would have triggered a fresh election that Social Credit would have almost certainly won. |
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⚫ | Although Aberhart was unable to gain control of Alberta's banks, his government gained a foothold in the province's financial industry by creating the [[Alberta Treasury Branches]] in 1938. Its operations included special credit given for those who bought made-in-Alberta goods. ATB has become Aberhart's legacy, operating as an orthodox [[financial institution]] and [[ |
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== Death and legacy == |
== Death and legacy == |
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Line 136: | Line 143: | ||
Historian Harold J. Schultz's 1964 "Portrait of a Premier: William Aberhart" was published in the ''Canadian Historical Review''.<ref name="CHR_Schultz_1964"/> A 1977 book edited by Lewis Herbert Thomas, traced Aberhart's role in the development of Alberta's Social Credit movement.<ref>{{cite book |editor-last=Thomas |editor-first=Lewis Herbert |title=William Aberhart and Social Credit in Alberta |date=1977 |publisher=Copp Clark |location=Toronto, Ontario |isbn=978-0-7730-3128-9}}</ref> |
Historian Harold J. Schultz's 1964 "Portrait of a Premier: William Aberhart" was published in the ''Canadian Historical Review''.<ref name="CHR_Schultz_1964"/> A 1977 book edited by Lewis Herbert Thomas, traced Aberhart's role in the development of Alberta's Social Credit movement.<ref>{{cite book |editor-last=Thomas |editor-first=Lewis Herbert |title=William Aberhart and Social Credit in Alberta |date=1977 |publisher=Copp Clark |location=Toronto, Ontario |isbn=978-0-7730-3128-9}}</ref> |
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In his 1978 article published in the ''[[Canadian Historical Review]]'', David R. Elliot examined Aberhart's theological and political beliefs.<ref name="CHR_Elliott_1978">{{cite journal |first=David R. |last=Elliott |title=Antithetical Elements In William Aberhart's Theology and Political Ideology |journal=Canadian Historical Review |publisher=University of Toronto Press |date=1978 |volume=59 |issue=1 |pages=38–58 |doi=10.3138/CHR-059-01-03}}</ref> |
In his 1978 article published in the ''[[Canadian Historical Review]]'', David R. Elliot examined Aberhart's theological and political beliefs.<ref name="CHR_Elliott_1978">{{cite journal |first=David R. |last=Elliott |title=Antithetical Elements In William Aberhart's Theology and Political Ideology |journal=Canadian Historical Review |publisher=University of Toronto Press |date=1978 |volume=59 |issue=1 |pages=38–58 |doi=10.3138/CHR-059-01-03|s2cid=145374314 }}</ref> |
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Elliot and Iris Miller published ''Bible Bill: A Biography of William Aberhart'' in 1987.<ref name="Elliott_Miller_Biography_1987">{{cite book | |
Elliot and Iris Miller published ''Bible Bill: A Biography of William Aberhart'' in 1987.<ref name="Elliott_Miller_Biography_1987">{{cite book |last1=Elliott |first1=David R. |last2=Miller |first2=Iris |title=Bible Bill: A Biography of William Aberhart |year=1987 |publisher=Reidmore Books |location=Edmonton, Alberta |isbn=0-919091-44-X }}</ref> A 2004 edited book —''Alberta Premiers of the Twentieth Century'', devoted a chapter to Aberhart.<ref>{{cite book |last=Elliott |first=David R. |editor-first=Bradford J. |editor-last=Rennie |chapter=William Aberhart, 1935-1943 |publisher=Canadian Plains Research Center, University of Regina |location=Regina, Saskatchewan |title=Alberta Premiers of the Twentieth Century |year=2004 |pages=126–145 |url={{google books|naghmtnXQoYC|plainurl=yes|page=125}} |isbn=0-88977-151-0}}</ref> |
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A June 2020 in-depth article in ''[[Alberta Views]]'' magazine, compared [[Premiership of Jason Kenney|Alberta Premier Jason Kenney]] to Aberhart.<ref>{{Cite web| title = Uncanny Resemblance| work = Alberta Views - The Magazine for Engaged Citizens| access-date = June 21, 2020| date = June 1, 2020| url = https://albertaviews.ca/uncanny-resemblance/}}</ref> |
A June 2020 in-depth article in ''[[Alberta Views]]'' magazine, compared [[Premiership of Jason Kenney|Alberta Premier Jason Kenney]] to Aberhart.<ref>{{Cite web| title = Uncanny Resemblance| work = Alberta Views - The Magazine for Engaged Citizens| access-date = June 21, 2020| date = June 1, 2020| url = https://albertaviews.ca/uncanny-resemblance/}}</ref> |
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Bruce Allen Powe in 1983 published a novel entitled ''The Aberhart Summer'' based on the events of 1935 when Aberhart swept into power. The novel was adapted as a stage play in 1999 by Conni Massing. |
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== Electoral record == |
== Electoral record == |
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Line 147: | Line 156: | ||
{| class="wikitable" |
{| class="wikitable" |
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| colspan="3" align=center|'''1935 by-election results ([[Okotoks-High River]])'''<ref>{{cite book | |
| colspan="3" align=center|'''1935 by-election results ([[Okotoks-High River]])'''<ref>{{cite book |last1=Mardon |first1=Ernest |author-link=Ernest Mardon |last2=Mardon |first2=Austin |title=Alberta Election Results 1882–1992 |publisher=Documentary Heritage Society of Alberta |location=Edmonton, A;berta |year=1993 }}, p. 99</ref> |
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| colspan="2"|<span style="font-size: 90%;"> |
| colspan="2"|<span style="font-size: 90%;"></span> |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| colspan="2" rowspan="1" align="left" valign="top" | '''Affiliation''' |
| colspan="2" rowspan="1" align="left" valign="top" | '''Affiliation''' |
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Line 161: | Line 170: | ||
| colspan="2"|<span style="font-size: 90%;">'''First count vote totals*'''</span> |
| colspan="2"|<span style="font-size: 90%;">'''First count vote totals*'''</span> |
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|- |
|- |
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{{ |
{{Canadian party colour|AB|Independent|row}} |
||
|[[Independent (politician)|Independent]] |
|[[Independent (politician)|Independent]] |
||
|[[Andrew Davison]]<ref group="Note" name="STV">Calgary was a multi-member constituency that elected five MLAs using the [[single transferable vote]] electoral method. These candidates were elected.</ref> |
|[[Andrew Davison]]<ref group="Note" name="STV">Calgary was a multi-member constituency that elected five MLAs using the [[single transferable vote]] electoral method. These candidates were elected.</ref> |
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Line 167: | Line 176: | ||
|align="right"|27.1% |
|align="right"|27.1% |
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{{CANelec|AB|Social Credit|'''William Aberhart'''<ref group="Note" name="STV"/>|12,122|26.4%}} |
{{CANelec|AB|Social Credit|'''William Aberhart'''<ref group="Note" name="STV"/>|12,122|26.4%}} |
||
{{ |
{{Canadian party colour|AB|Independent|row}} |
||
|[[Independent (politician)|Independent]] |
|[[Independent (politician)|Independent]] |
||
|[[James Mahaffey]]<ref group="Note" name="STV"/> |
|[[James Mahaffey]]<ref group="Note" name="STV"/> |
||
|align="right"|3,645 |
|align="right"|3,645 |
||
|align="right"|7.9% |
|align="right"|7.9% |
||
{{ |
{{Canadian party colour|AB|Independent|row}} |
||
|[[Independent (politician)|Independent]] |
|[[Independent (politician)|Independent]] |
||
|[[John J. Bowlen]]<ref group="Note" name="STV"/> |
|[[John J. Bowlen]]<ref group="Note" name="STV"/> |
||
|align="right"|3,447 |
|align="right"|3,447 |
||
|align="right"|7.5% |
|align="right"|7.5% |
||
{{ |
{{Canadian party colour|AB|CCF|row}} |
||
|[[Alberta New Democratic Party|CCF]] |
|[[Alberta New Democratic Party|CCF]] |
||
|[[Frederick J. White]] |
|[[Frederick J. White]] |
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|align="right"|2,846 |
|align="right"|2,846 |
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|align="right"|6.2% |
|align="right"|6.2% |
||
{{ |
{{Canadian party colour|AB|Independent|row}} |
||
|[[Independent (politician)|Independent]] |
|[[Independent (politician)|Independent]] |
||
|[[Joseph Tweed Shaw]] |
|[[Joseph Tweed Shaw]] |
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Line 189: | Line 198: | ||
{{CANelec|AB|Social Credit|[[Fred Anderson (Alberta politician)|Frederic Anderson]]<ref group="Note" name="STV"/>|1,939|4.2%}} |
{{CANelec|AB|Social Credit|[[Fred Anderson (Alberta politician)|Frederic Anderson]]<ref group="Note" name="STV"/>|1,939|4.2%}} |
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{{CANelec|AB|Social Credit|[[Edith Gostick]]|1,605|3.5%}} |
{{CANelec|AB|Social Credit|[[Edith Gostick]]|1,605|3.5%}} |
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{{ |
{{Canadian party colour|AB|Independent|row}} |
||
|[[Independent (politician)|Independent]] |
|[[Independent (politician)|Independent]] |
||
|Norman D. Dingle |
|Norman D. Dingle |
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Line 195: | Line 204: | ||
|align="right"|3.2% |
|align="right"|3.2% |
||
{{CANelec|AB|Social Credit|Mrs. Howitt D. Tarves|1,386|3.0%}} |
{{CANelec|AB|Social Credit|Mrs. Howitt D. Tarves|1,386|3.0%}} |
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{{ |
{{Canadian party colour|AB|CCF|row}} |
||
|[[Alberta New Democratic Party|CCF]] |
|[[Alberta New Democratic Party|CCF]] |
||
|Robert T. Alderman |
|Robert T. Alderman |
||
|align="right"|1,298 |
|align="right"|1,298 |
||
|align="right"|2.8% |
|align="right"|2.8% |
||
{{ |
{{Canadian party colour|AB|Independent|row}} |
||
|[[Independent (politician)|Independent]] |
|[[Independent (politician)|Independent]] |
||
|Harry Pryde |
|Harry Pryde |
||
|align="right"|576 |
|align="right"|576 |
||
|align="right"|1.3% |
|align="right"|1.3% |
||
{{ |
{{Canadian party colour|AB|Independent|row}} |
||
|[[Independent (politician)|Independent]] |
|[[Independent (politician)|Independent]] |
||
|Douglas V. Mitchell |
|Douglas V. Mitchell |
||
|align="right"|251 |
|align="right"|251 |
||
|align="right"|0.5% |
|align="right"|0.5% |
||
{{ |
{{Canadian party colour|AB|Independent|row}} |
||
|[[Independent (politician)|Independent]] |
|[[Independent (politician)|Independent]] |
||
|James M. Moodie |
|James M. Moodie |
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Line 216: | Line 225: | ||
|align="right"|0.4% |
|align="right"|0.4% |
||
|} |
|} |
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* The first count vote totals were altered through STV vote transfers, to produce the five successful candidates, one of which was not in a leading position in the first count. |
<nowiki/>* The first count vote totals were altered through STV vote transfers, to produce the five successful candidates, one of which was not in a leading position in the first count. |
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== See also == |
== See also == |
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Line 222: | Line 231: | ||
* [[History of Alberta]] |
* [[History of Alberta]] |
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* [[1937 Social Credit backbenchers' revolt]] |
* [[1937 Social Credit backbenchers' revolt]] |
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* [[Henry Hildebrand]] |
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* [[Sinclair Alexander Whittaker]] |
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* [[Briercrest College and Seminary]] |
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== Notes == |
== Notes == |
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Line 234: | Line 246: | ||
* {{cite book |last=Bell |first=Edward |title=Social Classes & Social Credit in Alberta |publisher=[[McGill-Queen's University Press]] |year=1993 |location=Montreal and Kingston |
* {{cite book |last=Bell |first=Edward |title=Social Classes & Social Credit in Alberta |publisher=[[McGill-Queen's University Press]] |year=1993 |location=Montreal and Kingston |
||
|url= |
|url=https://archive.org/details/socialclassessoc0000bell |url-access=registration |isbn=0-7735-1168-7}} |
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* {{cite book |last=Bell |first=Edward |editor-first=Bradford J. |editor-last=Rennie |chapter=Ernest Manning, 1943-1968 |publisher=Canadian Plains Research Center, University of Regina |location=Regina, Saskatchewan |
* {{cite book |last=Bell |first=Edward |editor-first=Bradford J. |editor-last=Rennie |chapter=Ernest Manning, 1943-1968 |publisher=Canadian Plains Research Center, University of Regina |location=Regina, Saskatchewan |
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|title=Alberta Premiers of the Twentieth Century |year=2004 |pages=148–178 |url= |
|title=Alberta Premiers of the Twentieth Century |year=2004 |pages=148–178 |url=https://archive.org/details/albertapremierso0000unse |url-access=registration |isbn=0-88977-151-0}} |
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* {{cite book |last=Brennan |first=Brian |title=The Good Steward: The Ernest C. Manning Story |year=2008 |publisher=Fifth House Ltd. |location=Calgary, Alberta |isbn=978-1-897252-16-1}} |
* {{cite book |last=Brennan |first=Brian |title=The Good Steward: The Ernest C. Manning Story |year=2008 |publisher=Fifth House Ltd. |location=Calgary, Alberta |isbn=978-1-897252-16-1}} |
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* {{cite book |last=Byrne |first=T. C. |author-link=Tim Byrne |title=Alberta's Revolutionary Leaders |year=1991 |publisher=Detselig Enterprises |location=Calgary, Alberta |isbn=1-55059-024-3}} |
* {{cite book |last=Byrne |first=T. C. |author-link=Tim Byrne |title=Alberta's Revolutionary Leaders |year=1991 |publisher=Detselig Enterprises |location=Calgary, Alberta |isbn=1-55059-024-3}} |
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* {{cite book |last=Calderola |first=Carlo |
* {{cite book |last=Calderola |first=Carlo |
||
|title=The Social Credit in Alberta, 1935-1971 |work=Society and Politics in Alberta |editor-first=C. |editor-last=Calderola |publisher=Methuen |date=1979 | |
|title=The Social Credit in Alberta, 1935-1971 |work=Society and Politics in Alberta |editor-first=C. |editor-last=Calderola |publisher=Methuen |date=1979 |pages=33–48 |isbn=9780458939107}} |
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* {{cite journal |last=Clark |first=S. D. |publisher=University of Chicago Press |
* {{cite journal |last=Clark |first=S. D. |publisher=University of Chicago Press |
||
|title=The Religious Sect in Canadian Politics |journal=The American Journal of Sociology |volume=51 |issue=3 |date=November 1945 |pages=207–216 |jstor=2770421 |doi=10.1086/219788}} |
|title=The Religious Sect in Canadian Politics |journal=The American Journal of Sociology |volume=51 |issue=3 |date=November 1945 |pages=207–216 |jstor=2770421 |doi=10.1086/219788|s2cid=145557571 }} |
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* {{cite book |editor-last=Cook |editor-first=Ramsay |title=Politics of Discontent: Essays by H. J. Schultz, M. A. Ormsby, J. R. H. Wilbur, B. J. Young |date=1967 |publisher=University of Toronto Press}} |
* {{cite book |editor-last=Cook |editor-first=Ramsay |title=Politics of Discontent: Essays by H. J. Schultz, M. A. Ormsby, J. R. H. Wilbur, B. J. Young |date=1967 |publisher=University of Toronto Press}} |
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* {{cite book |last=Elliott |first=David R. |editor-first=Bradford J. |editor-last=Rennie |chapter=William Aberhart, 1935-1943 |publisher=Canadian Plains Research Center, University of Regina |location=Regina, Saskatchewan |
* {{cite book |last=Elliott |first=David R. |editor-first=Bradford J. |editor-last=Rennie |chapter=William Aberhart, 1935-1943 |publisher=Canadian Plains Research Center, University of Regina |location=Regina, Saskatchewan |
||
|title=Alberta Premiers of the Twentieth Century |year=2004 |pages=126–145 |url= |
|title=Alberta Premiers of the Twentieth Century |year=2004 |pages=126–145 |url=https://archive.org/details/albertapremierso0000unse |url-access=registration |isbn=0-88977-151-0}} |
||
* {{cite book |last=Finkel |first=Alvin |title=The Social Credit Phenomenon in Alberta |publisher=University of Toronto Press |location=Toronto, Ontario |year=1989 |
* {{cite book |last=Finkel |first=Alvin |title=The Social Credit Phenomenon in Alberta |publisher=University of Toronto Press |location=Toronto, Ontario |year=1989 |
||
|url= |
|url=https://archive.org/details/socialcreditphen0000fink |url-access=registration |isbn=0-8020-6731-X}} |
||
* {{cite journal |last=Flanagan |first=Thomas |title=Social Credit in Alberta: A Canadian 'Cargo Cult'? |journal=Archives de Sociologie des Religions |
* {{cite journal |last=Flanagan |first=Thomas |title=Social Credit in Alberta: A Canadian 'Cargo Cult'? |journal=Archives de Sociologie des Religions |
||
|publisher= École des hautes études en sciences sociales |location=Paris, France |volume=34 |issue=34 |date=1972 |pages=39–48 |doi=10.3406/assr.1972.1889 |jstor=30115621}} |
|publisher= École des hautes études en sciences sociales |location=Paris, France |volume=34 |issue=34 |date=1972 |pages=39–48 |doi=10.3406/assr.1972.1889 |jstor=30115621}} |
||
* {{cite journal |last1=Flanagan |first1=Thomas |first2=Martha F. |last2=Lee |title=From Social Credit to Social Conservatism: The Evolution of an Ideology |journal=Prairie Forum |publisher=Canadian Plains Research Center |location=Regina, Saskatchewan |volume=16 |issue=2 |date=Fall 1991 |hdl=10294/256 | |
* {{cite journal |last1=Flanagan |first1=Thomas |first2=Martha F. |last2=Lee |title=From Social Credit to Social Conservatism: The Evolution of an Ideology |journal=Prairie Forum |publisher=Canadian Plains Research Center |location=Regina, Saskatchewan |volume=16 |issue=2 |date=Fall 1991 |hdl=10294/256 |pages=205–223 }} |
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* {{cite book |last=Foster |first=Franklin L. |title=John E. Brownlee: A Biography |year=1981 |publisher=Foster Learning Inc |location=Lloydminster, Alberta |
* {{cite book |last=Foster |first=Franklin L. |title=John E. Brownlee: A Biography |year=1981 |publisher=Foster Learning Inc |location=Lloydminster, Alberta |
||
|url={{google books|KWhO25oG7FEC|plainurl=yes}} |isbn=978-1-55220-004-9}} |
|url={{google books|KWhO25oG7FEC|plainurl=yes}} |isbn=978-1-55220-004-9}} |
||
* {{cite book |last=Irving |first=John A. |title=The Social Credit Movement in Alberta |date=1959 |publisher=University of Toronto Press |url= |
* {{cite book |last=Irving |first=John A. |title=The Social Credit Movement in Alberta |date=1959 |publisher=University of Toronto Press |isbn=9780802060846 |url=https://archive.org/details/socialcreditmove0000irvi |url-access=registration }} |
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* {{cite book |last=Mackey |first=Lloyd |title=Like father, like son: Ernest Manning & Preston Manning |year=1997 |publisher=ECW Press |location=Toronto, Ontario |isbn=1-55022-299-6}} |
* {{cite book |last=Mackey |first=Lloyd |title=Like father, like son: Ernest Manning & Preston Manning |year=1997 |publisher=ECW Press |location=Toronto, Ontario |isbn=1-55022-299-6 |url=https://archive.org/details/likefatherlikeso0000mack |url-access=registration}} |
||
* {{cite book |last=MacPherson |first=C. B. |author-link=C. B. Macpherson |
* {{cite book |last=MacPherson |first=C. B. |author-link=C. B. Macpherson |
||
|title=Democracy in Alberta: Social Credit and the Party System |date=2013 |orig-year=1953 |publisher=University of Toronto Press |location=Toronto, Ontario |edition=3rd |
|title=Democracy in Alberta: Social Credit and the Party System |date=2013 |orig-year=1953 |publisher=University of Toronto Press |location=Toronto, Ontario |edition=3rd |
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* {{cite book |last=Mallory |first=J. R. |title=Social Credit and the Federal Power in Canada |url=https://archive.org/details/McGillLibrary-rbsc_social-credit-fed-power-canada_JL27M251976-17181 |publisher=University of Toronto Press |location=Toronto, Ontario |date=1976 |orig-year=1954 |edition=reprint |isbn=0-8020-6301-2}} |
* {{cite book |last=Mallory |first=J. R. |title=Social Credit and the Federal Power in Canada |url=https://archive.org/details/McGillLibrary-rbsc_social-credit-fed-power-canada_JL27M251976-17181 |publisher=University of Toronto Press |location=Toronto, Ontario |date=1976 |orig-year=1954 |edition=reprint |isbn=0-8020-6301-2}} |
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* {{cite book|author-link1=H. Blair Neatby |last=Neatby |first=H. Blair |title=The Politics of Chaos: Canada in the Thirties |publisher=Haymax |location=Kemptville, Ontario |date=2003 |orig-year=1972 |edition=reprint |isbn=1-894908-01-5 |
* {{cite book|author-link1=H. Blair Neatby |last=Neatby |first=H. Blair |title=The Politics of Chaos: Canada in the Thirties |publisher=Haymax |location=Kemptville, Ontario |date=2003 |orig-year=1972 |edition=reprint |isbn=1-894908-01-5 |
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|url=https://archive.org/details/politicsofchaosc0000neat_y2s6 |url-access=registration }} |
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|url={{google books|MpmjZNrPqgoC|plainurl=yes}} }} |
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* {{cite book |editor-last=Thomas |editor-first=Lewis Herbert |title=William Aberhart and Social Credit in Alberta |date=1977 |publisher=Copp Clark |location=Toronto, Ontario |isbn=978-0-7730-3128-9}} |
* {{cite book |editor-last=Thomas |editor-first=Lewis Herbert |title=William Aberhart and Social Credit in Alberta |date=1977 |publisher=Copp Clark |location=Toronto, Ontario |isbn=978-0-7730-3128-9}} |
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* {{cite book |last=Wardhaugh |first=Robert Alexander |title=MacKenzie King and the Prairie West |year=2000 |publisher=University of Toronto Press |location=Toronto, Ontario |isbn=0-8020-4733-5}} |
* {{cite book |last=Wardhaugh |first=Robert Alexander |title=MacKenzie King and the Prairie West |year=2000 |publisher=University of Toronto Press |location=Toronto, Ontario |isbn=0-8020-4733-5}} |
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=== Primary sources === |
=== Primary sources === |
||
* {{cite journal |last=Aberhart |first=William |title=Aberhart On Social Credit: A Radio Broadcast |journal=Alberta History |publisher=Historical Society of Alberta |date=October 2005|volume=53 |issue=4 | |
* {{cite journal |last=Aberhart |first=William |title=Aberhart On Social Credit: A Radio Broadcast |journal=Alberta History |publisher=Historical Society of Alberta |date=October 2005|volume=53 |issue=4 |pages=24–30 |type=transcript of a 1935 radio broadcast |url=http://www.thefreelibrary.com/Aberhart+on+Social+Credit%3a+a+radio+broadcast.-a0141167148}} |
||
* {{cite book |last=Aberhart |first=William |url= |
* {{cite book |last=Aberhart |first=William |url=https://archive.org/details/aberhartoutpouri0000aber |url-access=registration |title=Aberhart: Outpourings and Replies |editor-first=David R. |editor-last=Elliott |publisher=Historical Society of Alberta |date=1991 |pages=1–41 |isbn=9781895379082 }} |
||
* {{cite book |first=Ernest C. |last=Manning |title=Political Realignment: A Challenge to Thoughtful Canadians |date=1967 |location=Toronto, Ontario |publisher=McClelland and Stewart |url= |
* {{cite book |first=Ernest C. |last=Manning |title=Political Realignment: A Challenge to Thoughtful Canadians |date=1967 |location=Toronto, Ontario |publisher=McClelland and Stewart |url=https://archive.org/details/politicalrealign0000mann |url-access=registration }} |
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== External links == |
== External links == |
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[[Category:20th-century members of the Legislative Assembly of Alberta]] |
Latest revision as of 21:47, 22 October 2024
William Aberhart | |
---|---|
7th Premier of Alberta | |
In office September 3, 1935 – May 23, 1943 | |
Monarchs | George V Edward VIII George VI |
Lieutenant Governor | William L. Walsh Philip Primrose John C. Bowen |
Preceded by | Richard Gavin Reid |
Succeeded by | Ernest Manning |
Alberta Minister of Education | |
In office September 3, 1935 – May 23, 1943 | |
Preceded by | Perren Baker |
Succeeded by | Solon Earl Low |
Member of the Legislative Assembly of Alberta | |
In office March 21, 1940 – May 23, 1943 | |
Constituency | Calgary |
In office November 4, 1935 – March 21, 1940 | |
Preceded by | William Morrison |
Succeeded by | John Broomfield |
Constituency | Okotoks-High River |
Personal details | |
Born | Kippen, Ontario, Canada | December 30, 1878
Died | May 23, 1943 Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada | (aged 64)
Resting place | Forest Lawn Memorial Park (Burnaby), Canada |
Political party | Social Credit |
Spouse | Jessie Flatt |
Children | 2 |
Residence(s) | Calgary, Alberta, Canada |
Occupation | Educator, evangelist |
Signature | |
William Aberhart (December 30, 1878 – May 23, 1943), also known as "Bible Bill" for his radio sermons about the Bible, was a Canadian politician and the seventh premier of Alberta from 1935 to his death in 1943.[1] He was the founder and first leader of the Alberta Social Credit Party, which believed the Great Depression was caused by ordinary people not having enough to spend. Therefore, Aberhart argued that the government should give each Albertan $25 per month to spend to stimulate the economy, by providing needed purchasing power to allow needy customers to buy from waiting businesses.
During his premiership, Aberhart campaigned for and instituted several anti-poverty and debt relief programs, and other governmental reforms, such as consolidation of Alberta's numerous small school districts into centralized school divisions, and natural resources conservation. His attempts at banking reform met with less success, facing strong opposition from the federal government, the courts, privately owned newspapers and a coalition of the Liberal and Conservative parties. Aberhart's government did successfully establish the Alberta Treasury Branches (now ATB Financial), a government-owned financial institution to provide an alternative to existing banks, which continues to operate as a Crown corporation of the Alberta government.
Early life
[edit]Childhood, education, and family
[edit]William Aberhart was born December 30, 1878, in Kippen, Ontario (now part of Bluewater, Ontario) to William (c. 1844 – 1910)[2] and Louisa (c. 1850–1944)[3] (née Pepper) Aberhart.[4]: 3 William Aberhart Sr. had immigrated to Canada from Germany with his family at the age of seven, while Louisa Pepper was born in Perth County, Ontario.[4]: 2 Historian Harold Schultz describes the Aberharts as "prosperous", while biographers David Elliott and Iris Miller says they "lived better than the average family".[4]: 3 [5] The fourth of eight children, William Aberhart Jr. delivered milk to his father's customers before school each day.[4]: 4 At school, he was a hard-working but average student.[4]: 5 [6] Mathematics was one of his strengths, though his approach involved more rote learning than reasoning. Elliott and Miller suggest that this tendency stayed with him his entire life, and that he "never really acquired an appreciation for inductive intellectual analysis".[4]: 5 Aberhart was not a social child.[4]: 6 Though he excelled at soccer,[7] he generally preferred solitary pursuits such as reading or teaching himself to play musical instruments.[5]: 186 [4]: 6–7
In 1896, Aberhart attended three months of model school in Mitchell. Although this training qualified him to work as a schoolteacher, he instead enrolled in business college in Chatham, from which he withdrew after four months of successful study.[4]: 6 In 1897–98, Aberhart attended Seaforth Collegiate Institute, where he was nicknamed "Whitey" (for his blond hair) and broadened his athletic prowess to include the long jump, shot put, 100-yard dash, high jump, cycling, and football.[4]: 6–7
On July 29, 1902, Aberhart married Jessie Flatt, whom he had met in 1901 at a football game.[4]: 14–15 A daughter, Khona Louise Aberhart, was born in the winter of 1903, and a second, Ola Janet Aberhart, followed in August 1905.[4]: 15
On July 20, 1910, William Aberhart Sr. died in an accident at a pharmacy owned by his son (William Jr.'s brother) Charles. Prohibition was in effect, but pharmacists were permitted to provide alcohol for "medicinal purposes". Charles kept a bottle of whiskey for William Sr. to drink whenever he was in the store. One day a clerk rearranged the bottles, and the illiterate William Sr. took a swallow of carbolic acid; he died within minutes. William Jr., by now in Calgary, did not make the trip east to his father's funeral.[4]: 23 Louisa Aberhart died February 20, 1944, outliving her son, William Aberhart Jr., by less than a year.[8]
In 1911, he earned a Bachelor of Arts degree from Queen's University in Kingston, Ontario.[9]
Teaching career
[edit]In the fall of 1901 Aberhart was hired as a teacher at the Central Public School in Brantford, for which he was paid $60 per month.[4]: 11–12 He fast won a reputation as a strict disciplinarian: he addressed his students by number rather than name and was liberal in his use of the strap. By his own account in a 1903 essay, he viewed the classroom as a battlefield, and admired Oliver Cromwell's military organization. While his tactics divided his students—some loved him, while others recounted that "he did everything he could to break the spirit of a child"—his supervisors gave him uniformly positive reviews.[4]: 15
His school's principal died in 1905, and Aberhart was selected to replace him; his salary increased to $1,000 per year.[4]: 15 This figure had reached $1,200 by 1910 when, in response to glowing reviews from his colleagues, the Calgary Board of Education offered him a principalship at $1,400 per year. In response to a petition from his staff and students that this offer be matched by Brantford, Aberhart was offered a raise to $1,300; he declined it, and moved to Calgary that spring.[4]: 20 His family followed later, after he purchased a two-storey wooden house and Khona finished her academic year in Brantford.[4]: 23–24 1910 Calgary was a frontier town that smelled of horse manure and in which public drunkenness was common; though Aberhart's sensibilities were less shocked by this than his wife's were, he also had to make some adjustments: in Brantford he had always attended church in a silk top hat and frock coat, but he quickly abandoned this custom after discovering that he was the only one in Calgary to do so.[4]: 23
Aberhart was to become principal of Mount Royal School, but it was not yet complete at the time of his arrival, so he became the principal of Alexandra Public School immediately on his arrival.[4]: 23 Mount Royal was still not completed by the fall, so he took over the principalship of Victoria School,[4]: 24 which he held until becoming principal of the new Crescent Heights High School in 1915.[7][4]: 44 [Note 1]
Elliott and Miller write that Aberhart took a less rigid approach to discipline at Crescent Heights than he had in Ontario,[4]: 44 though Schultz says that as principal he was "authoritarian in manner and a strict disciplinarian".[5]: 187 His love of organization persisted,[7][4]: 44 and his penchant for it enhanced his reputation as "an able administrator".[5]: 187 Crescent Height's students scored very well on departmental examinations, though some members of the school board believed that he achieved this at least partly by culling weaker students with a preliminary qualifying examination.[4]: 46
One way Aberhart applied his organizational prowess was in creating one of Calgary's first and largest parent–teacher associations, which had an average of two hundred parents attend each meeting; Aberhart had a generally good relationship with parents.[4]: 45 His standing with his staff was more mixed: he had a habit of "talking down" to them, dominated the school to the point that teachers were left with little initiative, and, as Elliott and Miller put it, "never entered the staff room except to issue an order".[5]: 187 [4]: 46 Many of his teachers, while respecting his abilities as an administrator, thought very little of him as a man, and some believed that his domineering approach stemmed from a fear of people smarter than him.[4]: 47 In 1919, eight Crescent Heights teachers wrote the school board requesting an investigation into Aberhart's work; the resulting inspection led to the transfer of three male teachers—with whom Aberhart had a particularly poor rapport—to other schools, and stated that persisting problems would lead to a request for Aberhart's resignation.[4]: 46 A follow-up investigation two years later found a substantial improvement in conditions and reported favourably on Aberhart's abilities.[4]: 47 Despite this uneven relationship, Aberhart was not all together closed-minded, and would entertain—and sometimes even be convinced by—arguments from his staff.[4]: 44 [11]
Besides his administrative duties, Aberhart taught English and math.[4]: 44 [5]: 187 True to form, in doing so he emphasized rote memorization at the expense of independent reasoning, to the point that one of his teachers once likened him to a dog trainer.[7][4]: 44 He cared for his students and provided extensive extra tutoring, especially for students in whom he saw a genuine interest in learning the material.[5]: 187 [4]: 44–45 Outside of the classroom, he applied his talents to organizing picnics and games,[5]: 187 and in 1922 organized an elected student council years before the concept became widespread in Calgary.[11] When some students wanted the school to purchase a movie projector not provided for in the school's budget, Aberhart organized a company into which students could buy for ten cents per share; the company put on movies for which it charged admission, and at the end of its first year of operation it declared a dividend of 25 cents per share. He urged his students to adopt four axioms he followed in his own life: "be enthusiastic, be ambitious, develop a distinctive personality, [and] have a hobby and ride it hard."[5]: 187
In the assessment of John Barr, a Social Credit staffer years after Aberhart's death who later wrote one of the first histories of the party's years in power, "Aberhart generally had the respect and admiration of a broad following of parents, teachers, and students."[11] Schultz states that the only area in which all 61 people he interviewed in researching Aberhart's career agreed was that he was an excellent high school teacher.[5]: 187
Ministry
[edit]Early religious views and adoption of Dispensationalism
[edit]Though his parents were not churchgoers, as a child Aberhart attended Sunday school at a Presbyterian church.[4]: 7–8 Under circumstances that are not clear to history, in high school he became a devout Christian.[4]: 7 He initially adopted Biblical literalism, though while at normal school he was exposed to more liberal versions of Christianity that taught the existence of internal inconsistencies in the Bible; for several years he adopted the approach of a Bible teacher who counselled him to "treat [the] Bible as ... a nice plate of fish" and "eat the meat and leave the bones for the dogs".[4]: 8–9 Though at first he subscribed to the notion of unconditional election, and worried about whether he was destined for salvation, he later adopted the Arminian doctrine of conditional election, and became confident that, through his faith, he would be saved.[4]: 9
While in Brantford, Aberhart studied at Zion Presbyterian church,[5]: 186 where he became interested in Biblical prophecy, which in turn led him to Dispensationalism. Dispensationalism held that history was divided into seven dispensations, during each of which God made a covenant with man, and during each of which man broke the covenant.[4]: 12 That the terms of the covenant were different in each dispensation resolved Aberhart's earlier concerns about the Bible's internal inconsistencies.[4]: 9 His views were heavily influenced by a correspondence course he took offered by American Dispensationalist Cyrus Scofield; Elliott and Miller speculate that such a course would have appealed to Aberhart by reducing "difficult theological problems to a matter of memorizing questions and answers".[4]: 3
Aberhart had aspired to take ministerial training at the Presbyterian Knox College Divinity School, but the church in Brantford was reluctant to take on the support of both him and his family in the four-year training period. He became fascinated with prophetical teaching in the Bible and studied a correspondence course by Cyrus Scofield. He had been introduced to this system while attending a men's Bible Class at Zion Presbyterian, taught by William Nichol, an elderly physician.[12]
In 1910, Aberhart accepted a position as principal of Alexandra School in Calgary, Alberta. His initial Bible Study Teaching in Calgary commenced at the Grace Presbyterian Church at the Young Men's Bible Class. Within a few weeks attendance was over 100 and he attracted the attendance of the senior minister Dr. Esler, but his views on prophecy did not jibe with senior minister's reformed beliefs and his teaching privileges were cancelled. He then moved on to teach successively at the Wesley and Trinity Methodist Churches.[13]
In 1915, he became an unpaid pastor of Westbourne Baptist Church in Calgary.[14] In 1918, he founded a Bible study group in the church, which grew in attendance over the years. In 1920 he was baptized by immersion.[15] In 1925, he broadcast his Sunday sermons on the radio station CFCN, which allowed him to broadcast his prophetic preaching to listeners throughout the Canadian prairies and part of the northern United States. In 1927 he made the decision to terminate the church's affiliation with the Baptist Union of Western Canada due to theological differences with the teachings given at the union college.[16] In 1927, he founded the Calgary Prophetic Bible Institute in a new building.[17] The institute building also housed the Westbourne Baptist Church. In 1929, a section of church members who disagreed with his beliefs about the need for a baptism of the Holy Spirit separate from conversion, decided to return to the old building, prompting Aberhart to found Bible Institute Baptist Church.[16] Towards the end of his life British Israelism became increasingly central to his theology.[18] British Israelism had been an element of his theology from an early stage, but assumed further importance following the 1939 royal tour of Canada where he spoke with King George VI on the topic.[4]: 284
Early political involvement
[edit]Aberhart became interested in politics during the Great Depression in Canada, a time which was especially harsh on Albertan and Saskatchewan farmers. Particularly, he was drawn to the Social Credit theories of Major C. H. Douglas, a British engineer. From 1932 to 1935, Aberhart lobbied for the governing political party, the United Farmers of Alberta, to adopt these theories, but it never did.
It is doubtful that Aberhart fully understood the theories himself.[19] The basis of Douglas's A+B theorem is that prices rise faster than incomes when regarded as a flow, and individuals' purchasing power should be supplemented through issuance of new credits that have not derived from the productive system. After Aberhart's lobbying of the United Farmers to adopt Social Credit principles was unsuccessful, he helped found the Social Credit Party of Alberta.
Premier of Alberta (1935–1943)
[edit]Electoral record
[edit]The Social Credit Party won the 1935 provincial election by a landslide with over 54% of the popular vote and all but seven of the 63 seats in the legislature.[20]
Not even the Socreds had expected to win the election. Indeed, its expectations were so low that it had not named a formal leader during the campaign. The party was now tasked with selecting a leader who would become the province's new premier. Aberhart was the obvious choice, as he had been the party's founder and guiding force. He initially said he did not want the job, but was finally prevailed to accept it.[citation needed]
He was sworn in as premier on September 3 (11 days after his August 22 victory). However, he was not yet a member of the legislature. The Social Credit MLA for Okotoks-High River, William Morrison, resigned to give Aberhart a chance to get a seat, per standard practice in the Westminster system when a leader or cabinet minister does not have a seat.[citation needed]
Aberhart won the November 4 by-election, held prior to the first sitting of the new legislature after the general election. Aberhart was elected by acclamation.[citation needed]
Aberhart served as premier and as his own minister of education and, starting in 1937, Attorney General. Aberhart's government was re-elected in the 1940 election with a somewhat reduced mandate, with Aberhart being elected to a Calgary seat.[citation needed]
Policy
[edit]Aberhart's government did not implement much of the Social Credit policies promised in the party's election platform, because of the province's very poor financial position in the depths of the Depression. The federal government's opposition to Social Credit was a significant block to Aberhart's policy goals. The federal government has jurisdiction over Canadian currency and banks, under the British North America Act, 1867. However, there was no constitutional barrier to Alberta producing its own currency, which Aberhart's government did to a limited degree with its prosperity certificates. Aberhart did threaten the power of private banks with his government's extension of the UFA government's foreclosure moratorium and mandatory debt adjustment. But a law to tax banks was overturned on constitutional grounds. Later, the government started its own banks, which carry on as the Alberta Treasury Branch (ATB Financial).
Aberhart instituted a variety of relief programs to help people out of poverty, as well as public works programs and a debt relief program that froze some debt collections and mortgage foreclosures. This, like Tommy Douglas' similar program in Saskatchewan, was later overturned in the mid-1940s by the Supreme Court, although it aided people for a number of years during and (for a short time) after the Great Depression.
Alberta's Social Credit government brought in legislation under which an MLA could be recalled by a portion of their constituents. Aberhart's own constituents, including out-of-power UFA farmers and many oilworkers working for U.S. oil companies threatened by Aberhart's Natural Resources Conservation legislation, gathered signatures for Aberhart's own recall. He thus became the first Canadian politician to be threatened with recall from office. Aberhart's government retroactively repealed the recall legislation rather than have Aberhart forced to give up his seat.[21]
In keeping with his evangelical views, Aberhart added a heavy dose of social conservatism to Major Douglas's ideas. Most notably, he enacted very tight restrictions on the sale of alcohol. Indeed, the only stricter law in Canada at the time was in Prince Edward Island, where the sale of alcohol remained completely banned until 1948. Well into the 1960s, commercial airlines could not serve alcohol while flying over Alberta.
Although Aberhart was unable to gain control of Alberta's banks, his government gained a foothold in the province's financial industry by creating the Alberta Treasury Branches in 1938. Its operations included special credit given for those who bought made-in-Alberta goods. ATB has become Aberhart's legacy, operating as an orthodox financial institution and Crown corporation.
Conflict with Lieutenant Governor
[edit]Lieutenant Governor John C. Bowen refused to give royal assent to three government bills in 1937. Two of the bills would have put the province's banks under the control of the provincial government, while a third, the Accurate News and Information Act, would have forced newspapers to print government rebuttals to stories the provincial cabinet deemed "inaccurate". All three bills were later declared unconstitutional by the Supreme Court of Canada and the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council. For its leadership in the fight against the latter act, in 1938 the Edmonton Journal was awarded a Pulitzer Prize special citation and bronze plaque, the first time a special citation was awarded outside the United States, while 95 other newspapers including the Calgary Herald, the Red Deer News, Lethbridge Herald and the province's weekly newspapers were recognized with engraved certificates.
By late 1937, relations with the lieutenant governor became so strained that Bowen even threatened to dismiss Aberhart's government, which would have been an extraordinary use of his reserve powers. An analogous situation occurred in 1932 in Australia between Jack Lang and Sir Philip Game, the premier and governor, respectively, of New South Wales. However, Bowen did not follow through on his threat due in part to Social Credit's immense popularity with the people. Had he dismissed Aberhart, it would have triggered a fresh election that Social Credit would have almost certainly won.
Death and legacy
[edit]Aberhart died unexpectedly on May 23, 1943, during a visit to his adult daughters in Vancouver, British Columbia, and was interred in Forest Lawn Memorial Park in Burnaby as his widow intended to move to Vancouver to be close to her children.[22] He was succeeded as the Premier of Alberta by his lifelong disciple, Ernest C. Manning, who gradually moved away from Douglas' monetary theories. Social Credit would remain in office until its defeat in the 1971 election—one of the longest-serving provincial governments in Canadian history, and one of the longest-serving in the Commonwealth.
The Aberhart Centre, a long-term medical care centre at the University of Alberta Hospital in Edmonton, is named in his honour, as is William Aberhart High School in Calgary.
In 1974, he was named a Person of National Historic Significance by the Government of Canada. A plaque commemorating this sits inside Crescent Heights High School at 1019 1st NW, Calgary, Alberta.[23]
Ideology
[edit]Elliott (1978) argues that the Aberhart's Social Credit ideology was clearly antithetical to his previous theology, which was highly sectarian, separatist, apolitical, other-worldly, and eschatologically oriented. Elliott challenges the arguments of Mann (1955) and Irving (1959) that there was a definite connection between Aberhart's theology and political program. Elliott reports that Aberhart's political support did not come from the sectarian groups as Mann and Irving suggest, but rather it came from the members of established churches and those with marginal religious commitment.[24]
Publications and articles about Aberhart
[edit]Historian Harold J. Schultz's 1964 "Portrait of a Premier: William Aberhart" was published in the Canadian Historical Review.[5] A 1977 book edited by Lewis Herbert Thomas, traced Aberhart's role in the development of Alberta's Social Credit movement.[25]
In his 1978 article published in the Canadian Historical Review, David R. Elliot examined Aberhart's theological and political beliefs.[24]
Elliot and Iris Miller published Bible Bill: A Biography of William Aberhart in 1987.[4] A 2004 edited book —Alberta Premiers of the Twentieth Century, devoted a chapter to Aberhart.[26]
A June 2020 in-depth article in Alberta Views magazine, compared Alberta Premier Jason Kenney to Aberhart.[27]
Bruce Allen Powe in 1983 published a novel entitled The Aberhart Summer based on the events of 1935 when Aberhart swept into power. The novel was adapted as a stage play in 1999 by Conni Massing.
Electoral record
[edit]November 4, 1935, provincial by-election Okotoks—High River
1935 by-election results (Okotoks-High River)[28] | ||||
Affiliation | Candidate | Votes N.A. | % | |
Social Credit | William Aberhart | Acclaimed |
1940 Alberta general election results (Calgary)[29] | First count vote totals* | |||
Independent | Andrew Davison[Note 2] | 12,465 | 27.1% | |
Social Credit | William Aberhart[Note 2] | 12,122 | 26.4% | |
Independent | James Mahaffey[Note 2] | 3,645 | 7.9% | |
Independent | John J. Bowlen[Note 2] | 3,447 | 7.5% | |
CCF | Frederick J. White | 2,846 | 6.2% | |
Independent | Joseph Tweed Shaw | 2,685 | 5.8% | |
Social Credit | Frederic Anderson[Note 2] | 1,939 | 4.2% | |
Social Credit | Edith Gostick | 1,605 | 3.5% | |
Independent | Norman D. Dingle | 1,480 | 3.2% | |
Social Credit | Mrs. Howitt D. Tarves | 1,386 | 3.0% | |
CCF | Robert T. Alderman | 1,298 | 2.8% | |
Independent | Harry Pryde | 576 | 1.3% | |
Independent | Douglas V. Mitchell | 251 | 0.5% | |
Independent | James M. Moodie | 169 | 0.4% |
* The first count vote totals were altered through STV vote transfers, to produce the five successful candidates, one of which was not in a leading position in the first count.
See also
[edit]- History of Alberta
- 1937 Social Credit backbenchers' revolt
- Henry Hildebrand
- Sinclair Alexander Whittaker
- Briercrest College and Seminary
Notes
[edit]- ^ Schultz reports this date as 1927, saying that Aberhart was principal of "Balmoral Heights" from 1915 until then.[5]: 187 This confusion may be because when Crescent Heights opened in 1915, it occupied part of Balmoral School, an elementary school. Crescent Heights received its own building in 1929.[10]
- ^ a b c d e Calgary was a multi-member constituency that elected five MLAs using the single transferable vote electoral method. These candidates were elected.
References
[edit]- ^ Elliot, David R. (February 14, 2008). "William Aberhart". Canadian Encyclopedia (online ed.). Historica Canada. Retrieved September 24, 2013.
- ^ Perry, Sandra E.; Craig, Jessica J. (2006). The Mantle of Leadership: Premiers of the Northwest Territories and Alberta. Edmonton, Alberta: Legislative Assembly of Alberta. ISBN 0-9689217-2-8., p. 409
- ^ Perry & Craig 2006, p. 410.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq Elliott, David R.; Miller, Iris (1987). Bible Bill: A Biography of William Aberhart. Edmonton, Alberta: Reidmore Books. ISBN 0-919091-44-X.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Schultz, Harold J. (1964). "Portrait of a Premier: William Aberhart". Canadian Historical Review. 45 (3). Toronto, Ontario: University of Toronto Press: 185–228. doi:10.3138/chr-045-03-01. ISSN 0008-3755. S2CID 162639596., p. 185
- ^ Barr, John J. (1974). The Dynasty: The Rise and Fall of Social Credit in Alberta. Toronto, Ontario: McClelland and Stewart Limited. ISBN 0-7710-1015-X., p. 37
- ^ a b c d Barr 1974, p. 37.
- ^ "William Aberhart Family History". Alberta Family Histories Society. Archived from the original on September 17, 2010. Retrieved March 11, 2010.
- ^ James H. Marsh, The Canadian Encyclopedia, McClelland & Stewart, Canada, 1999, p. 2
- ^ "Balmoral School, 16th Avenue N.W., taken in snowstorm". Community Heritage and Family History Digital Library. Calgary Public Library. Retrieved March 11, 2010.
- ^ a b c Barr 1974, p. 38.
- ^ Johnson, L. P. V.; McNutt, Ola (1970). Aberhart of Alberta. Institute of Applied Art. pp. 26–27.
- ^ Johnson & McNutt 1970, pp. 50–51.
- ^ John Gordon Stackhouse, Canadian Evangelicalism in the Twentieth Century: An Introduction to Its Character, Regent College Publishing, Canada, 1998, p. 37
- ^ William H. Brackney, Historical Dictionary of the Baptists, Rowman & Littlefield, USA, 2021, p. 9
- ^ a b John Gordon Stackhouse, Canadian Evangelicalism in the Twentieth Century: An Introduction to Its Character, Regent College Publishing, Canada, 1998, p. 41
- ^ Randall Herbert Balmer, Encyclopedia of Evangelicalism: Revised and expanded edition, Baylor University Press, USA, 2004, p. 1
- ^ Rennie, Bradford J. (2004). Alberta Premiers of the Twentieth Century. Regina, Saskatchewan: Canadian Plains Research Center, University of Regina. p. 144. ISBN 978-0-8897-7151-2. Retrieved September 28, 2015.
- ^ Douglas, C.H. (June 1, 1935). Possible Social Credit in Alberta. First interim report on the possibilities of the application of social credit principles to the Province of Alberta (Report). Retrieved September 28, 2015.[dead link ]
- ^ Thorne, J.O.; Collocott, T.C., eds. (1984). Chambers Biographical Dictionary (illustrated, revised ed.). Chambers. p. 4. ISBN 0-550-18022-2.
- ^ Rowat, Don (1998). "Our Referendums are not Direct Democracy" (PDF). Canadian Parliamentary Review. 21 (3): 25–27.
- ^ "Aberhart Rites on Wednesday". Calgary Herald. May 25, 1943. Retrieved August 25, 2011.
- ^ Aberhart, William National Historic Person. Directory of Federal Heritage Designations. Parks Canada.
- ^ a b Elliott, David R. (1978). "Antithetical Elements In William Aberhart's Theology and Political Ideology". Canadian Historical Review. 59 (1). University of Toronto Press: 38–58. doi:10.3138/CHR-059-01-03. S2CID 145374314.
- ^ Thomas, Lewis Herbert, ed. (1977). William Aberhart and Social Credit in Alberta. Toronto, Ontario: Copp Clark. ISBN 978-0-7730-3128-9.
- ^ Elliott, David R. (2004). "William Aberhart, 1935-1943". In Rennie, Bradford J. (ed.). Alberta Premiers of the Twentieth Century. Regina, Saskatchewan: Canadian Plains Research Center, University of Regina. pp. 126–145. ISBN 0-88977-151-0.
- ^ "Uncanny Resemblance". Alberta Views - The Magazine for Engaged Citizens. June 1, 2020. Retrieved June 21, 2020.
- ^ Mardon, Ernest; Mardon, Austin (1993). Alberta Election Results 1882–1992. Edmonton, A;berta: Documentary Heritage Society of Alberta., p. 99
- ^ Mardon & Mardon 1993, p. 33.
Further reading/other sources
[edit]- Bell, Edward (1993). Social Classes & Social Credit in Alberta. Montreal and Kingston: McGill-Queen's University Press. ISBN 0-7735-1168-7.
- Bell, Edward (2004). "Ernest Manning, 1943-1968". In Rennie, Bradford J. (ed.). Alberta Premiers of the Twentieth Century. Regina, Saskatchewan: Canadian Plains Research Center, University of Regina. pp. 148–178. ISBN 0-88977-151-0.
- Brennan, Brian (2008). The Good Steward: The Ernest C. Manning Story. Calgary, Alberta: Fifth House Ltd. ISBN 978-1-897252-16-1.
- Byrne, T. C. (1991). Alberta's Revolutionary Leaders. Calgary, Alberta: Detselig Enterprises. ISBN 1-55059-024-3.
- Calderola, Carlo (1979). Calderola, C. (ed.). The Social Credit in Alberta, 1935-1971. Methuen. pp. 33–48. ISBN 9780458939107.
{{cite book}}
:|work=
ignored (help) - Clark, S. D. (November 1945). "The Religious Sect in Canadian Politics". The American Journal of Sociology. 51 (3). University of Chicago Press: 207–216. doi:10.1086/219788. JSTOR 2770421. S2CID 145557571.
- Cook, Ramsay, ed. (1967). Politics of Discontent: Essays by H. J. Schultz, M. A. Ormsby, J. R. H. Wilbur, B. J. Young. University of Toronto Press.
- Elliott, David R. (2004). "William Aberhart, 1935-1943". In Rennie, Bradford J. (ed.). Alberta Premiers of the Twentieth Century. Regina, Saskatchewan: Canadian Plains Research Center, University of Regina. pp. 126–145. ISBN 0-88977-151-0.
- Finkel, Alvin (1989). The Social Credit Phenomenon in Alberta. Toronto, Ontario: University of Toronto Press. ISBN 0-8020-6731-X.
- Flanagan, Thomas (1972). "Social Credit in Alberta: A Canadian 'Cargo Cult'?". Archives de Sociologie des Religions. 34 (34). Paris, France: École des hautes études en sciences sociales: 39–48. doi:10.3406/assr.1972.1889. JSTOR 30115621.
- Flanagan, Thomas; Lee, Martha F. (Fall 1991). "From Social Credit to Social Conservatism: The Evolution of an Ideology". Prairie Forum. 16 (2). Regina, Saskatchewan: Canadian Plains Research Center: 205–223. hdl:10294/256.
- Foster, Franklin L. (1981). John E. Brownlee: A Biography. Lloydminster, Alberta: Foster Learning Inc. ISBN 978-1-55220-004-9.
- Irving, John A. (1959). The Social Credit Movement in Alberta. University of Toronto Press. ISBN 9780802060846.
- Mackey, Lloyd (1997). Like father, like son: Ernest Manning & Preston Manning. Toronto, Ontario: ECW Press. ISBN 1-55022-299-6.
- MacPherson, C. B. (2013) [1953]. Democracy in Alberta: Social Credit and the Party System (3rd ed.). Toronto, Ontario: University of Toronto Press. ISBN 978-1-4426-1575-5.
- Mallory, J. R. (1976) [1954]. Social Credit and the Federal Power in Canada (reprint ed.). Toronto, Ontario: University of Toronto Press. ISBN 0-8020-6301-2.
- Neatby, H. Blair (2003) [1972]. The Politics of Chaos: Canada in the Thirties (reprint ed.). Kemptville, Ontario: Haymax. ISBN 1-894908-01-5.
- Thomas, Lewis Herbert, ed. (1977). William Aberhart and Social Credit in Alberta. Toronto, Ontario: Copp Clark. ISBN 978-0-7730-3128-9.
- Wardhaugh, Robert Alexander (2000). MacKenzie King and the Prairie West. Toronto, Ontario: University of Toronto Press. ISBN 0-8020-4733-5.
Primary sources
[edit]- Aberhart, William (October 2005). "Aberhart On Social Credit: A Radio Broadcast". Alberta History (transcript of a 1935 radio broadcast). 53 (4). Historical Society of Alberta: 24–30.
- Aberhart, William (1991). Elliott, David R. (ed.). Aberhart: Outpourings and Replies. Historical Society of Alberta. pp. 1–41. ISBN 9781895379082.
- Manning, Ernest C. (1967). Political Realignment: A Challenge to Thoughtful Canadians. Toronto, Ontario: McClelland and Stewart.
External links
[edit]- 1878 births
- 1943 deaths
- Alberta Social Credit Party leaders
- Alberta Social Credit Party MLAs
- Antisemitism in Canada
- Canadian evangelicals
- Canadian Baptist ministers
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