Dunsmuir ministry

Cabinet of British Columbia, 1900–1902

Dunsmuir ministry

14th ministry of British Columbia
Date formedJune 15, 1900 (1900-06-15)
Date dissolvedNovember 21, 1902 (1902-11-21)
People and organisations
Monarch
Lieutenant Governor
PremierJames Dunsmuir
No. of ministers5
Ministers removed3
Total no. of members8
Member partiesNon-partisan
History
Election1900
Legislature term9th Parliament
PredecessorMartin ministry
SuccessorPrior ministry

The Dunsmuir ministry was the combined Cabinet that governed British Columbia from June 15, 1900, to November 21, 1902. It was led by James Dunsmuir, the 14th premier of British Columbia. It was formed following the 1900 general election, in which the incumbent premier, Joseph Martin, failed to gain a majority; he subsequently recommended Dunsmuir as the next government leader.[1]

On November 21, 1902, Dunsmuir submitted his resignation to Lieutenant Governor Henri-Gustave Joly de Lotbinière and recommended Edward Gawler Prior as his successor. Joly de Lotbinière then invited Prior to form a government, who accepted and formed the Prior ministry.[2]

List of ministers

Dunsmuir ministry by portfolio[3]
PortfolioMinisterTenure
StartEnd
Premier of British ColumbiaJames DunsmuirJune 15, 1900November 21, 1902
President of the Council
Attorney GeneralDavid McEwen EbertsJune 15, 1900November 21, 1902
Minister of Finance and AgricultureJohn Herbert TurnerJune 15, 1900September 3, 1901
James Douglas PrenticeSeptember 3, 1901November 21, 1902
Minister of EducationJames Douglas PrenticeJune 21, 1900September 3, 1901
John Cunningham BrownSeptember 3, 1901September 30, 1901
James Douglas Prentice[a]September 30, 1901November 21, 1902
Chief Commissioner of Lands and WorksWilmer Cleveland WellsJune 21, 1900November 21, 1902
Minister of MinesRichard McBrideJune 21, 1900September 3, 1901
David McEwen Eberts[a]September 3, 1901February 27, 1902
Edward Gawler PriorFebruary 27, 1902November 21, 1902
Provincial SecretaryJames Douglas PrenticeJune 21, 1900September 3, 1901
John Cunningham BrownSeptember 3, 1901September 30, 1901
James Douglas Prentice[a]September 30, 1901November 21, 1902

Cabinet shuffles

On September 3, 1901, finance minister John Herbert Turner resigned in order to become the province's agent general in London and was succeeded by James Douglas Prentice; Prentice, the provincial secretary and education minister, was in turn succeeded by John Cunningham Brown. Brown was an ally of former premier Joseph Martin, and his appointment was opposed by Richard McBride – Martin's political rival – who resigned from cabinet in protest.[4] On September 18, Brown was defeated in a ministerial by-election.[5] Two weeks later, on October 4, Brown resigned from cabinet, and Prentice regained the portfolios while also remaining minister of finance and agriculture.[6]

On March 6, 1902, Edward Gawler Prior joined cabinet as minister of mines, filling the absence left by McBride.[7]

Notes

  1. ^ a b c Acting

References

  1. ^ "Dunsmuir the New Premier". Vancouver Daily Province. June 15, 1900. p. 1.
  2. ^ "Mr. Dunsmuir Has Resigned; Col. Prior Now Premier". The Vancouver Daily Province. November 22, 1902. p. 1.
  3. ^ "British Columbia Executive Council Appointments (1871-1986)" (PDF). Legislative Library of British Columbia. p. 29. Retrieved December 3, 2024.
  4. ^ "J. C. Brown Sworn In—R. McBride Resigns and Will Contest His Re-Election". The Vancouver Daily World. September 3, 1901. p. 1.
  5. ^ "Gifford Wins a Splendid Victory". The Vancouver Daily Province. September 19, 1901. p. 1.
  6. ^ "Brown Resigns Cabinet Porision". Victoria Daily Times. October 4, 1901.
  7. ^ "Colonel E. G. Prior Sworn in as Minister of Mines". The Vernon News. March 6, 1902. p. 1.
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