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John Abbott

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The Honourable Sir John Joseph Caldwell Abbott
3rd Prime Minister of Canada Canada
In office
June 16, 1891 – November 24, 1892
Preceded byJohn A. Macdonald
Succeeded byJohn Thompson
Personal details
BornMarch 12, 1821
St-Andre-Est, Quebec
DiedOctober 30, 1893
Montreal, Quebec
Political partyConservative

Sir John Joseph Caldwell Abbott, PC , QC , KCMG , BCL , DCL (March 12, 1821October 30, 1893) was the third Prime Minister of Canada. He served in the office for seventeen months, from June 16, 1891 to November 24, 1892. He was also the great-grandfather of Canadian actor Christopher Plummer.

Born in St. Andrews, Lower Canada (now Saint-André-Est, Quebec) to Rev. Joseph Abbott and Harriet Bradford, he became Canada's first native-born prime minister. Abbott married Mary Bethune (1823-1898) in 1849. The couple had four children.

Abbott was a successful Montreal corporate lawyer and businessman. In 1849, he signed the Montreal Annexation Manifesto calling for Canada to join the United States, an action which later in life, he regretted as a youthful error. He eventually joined the Loyal Orange Lodge of British North America, well known as a pro-British organization. He was involved in the promotion of several railroad projects, including the Canada Central Railway (of which he served as President). As legal advisor to Hugh Allen, he worked to incorporate and arrange financing for the first Canadian Pacific Railway syndicate, until the 1873 Pacific Scandal broke. He was subsequently a key organizer of a second syndicate which eventually completed the construction of Canada's first transcontinental railroad in 1885, serving as its solicitor from 1880 to 1887 and as a director from 1885 to 1891.

He received a BCL from McGill University in 1854, and a Doctor of Civil Law (DCL) in 1867. Most of his legal practice was in corporate law; however, his most celebrated court case was the defense of two Confederate agents who had raided St. Albans, Vermont from Canadian soil during the American Civil War. Abbott successfully argued that the two were belligerents rather than criminals and therefore should not be extradited. The episode brought Canadian-American tensions close to armed conflict. Abbott was widely viewed as the most successful lawyer in Canada for many years, as measured by professional income. He began lecturing in commercial and criminal law at McGill in 1853, and in 1855 he became a professor and dean of its Faculty of Law. He continued in this position until 1880. Upon his retirement, McGill named him emeritus professor, and in 1881 appointed him to its Board of Governors.

Abbott first ran for Canada's Legislative Assembly in 1857 in the Argenteuil district northwest of Montreal. Defeated, he challenged the election results on the grounds of voting list irregularities and was eventually awarded the seat in 1860. He served as solicitor general for Lower Canada (Quebec) until 1863. He reluctantly supported Canada's confederation, fearing the reduction of the political power of Lower Canada's English-speaking minority. His proposal to protect the electoral borders of 12 English Quebec constituencies was eventually incorporated into the British North America Act of 1867.

Abbott was elected to the House of Commons in 1867 as member for Argenteuil. After documents implicating Prime Minister Sir John A. Macdonald in the Pacific Scandal were stolen from his office, he was removed from his seat by petition in 1874. He narrowly lost the 1878 election, then won in February 1880, only to have it declared void because of bribery allegations. He was, however, elected in a by-election in August 1881. In 1887, Macdonald appointed him to the Senate. He served as Leader of the Government in the Senate from May 12, 1887 to October 30, 1893 (including his term as Prime Minister) and as Minister without Portfolio in Macdonald's cabinet. He also served two one-year terms as mayor of Montreal from 1887 to 1889.

When Prime Minister Macdonald died in office, Abbott supported John Thompson to succeed him, but reluctantly accepted the plea of the divided Conservative party that he should lead the government. In his seventeen months in office, Abbott worked on revitalizing the government and the party. Despite the scandals exposed during his term, he dealt with the backlog of government business awaiting him after Macdonald's death. Reform of the civil service, revisions of the criminal code and a reciprocity treaty with the U.S. were just a few of the issues initiated by Abbott. During his term, there were 52 by-elections, 42 of which were won by the Conservatives, increasing their majority by 13 seats—evidence of Abbott's effectiveness as prime minister. One year into his time as prime minister, Abbott attempted to turn the office over to Thompson, but this was rejected due to anti-Catholic sentiment in the Tory caucus. Suffering from the early stages of cancer of the brain, Abbott's health failed in 1892 and he retired to private life, whereupon Thompson finally became Prime Minister. Abbott died less than a year later at the age of 72.

Sir John Abbott is buried in the Mount Royal Cemetery, Montreal, Quebec.

John Abbott College in Sainte-Anne-de-Bellevue, Quebec, near Abbott's 300-acre country estate (Boisbriant), is named after him.

His most famous political comment is "I hate politics". The fuller quote was "I hate politics and what are considered their appropriate measures. I hate notoriety, public meetings, public speeches, caucuses and everything that I know of which is apparently the necessary incident of politics- except doing public work to the best of my ability."[1]

See also

References

  1. ^ As quoted by Gordon Donaldson, The Prime Ministers of Canada, Doubleday Canada Limited, 1997, page 49.
Template:Succession box two to two
Preceded by Mayor of Montreal
1887-1889
Succeeded by
Preceded by
None
Member for Argenteuil
1867–1874
Succeeded by
Preceded by Member for Argenteuil
1880–1887
Succeeded by

Template:Conservative Leaders


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