William Barber (Ontario politician)

William Barber (March 1808 August 25, 1887) was a Canadian businessman and politician.

William Barber
Ontario MPP
In office
1867–1875
Preceded byNew riding
Succeeded byWilliam Durie Lyon
ConstituencyHalton
Personal details
BornMarch 1808
County Antrim in Ulster, Ireland
DiedAugust 25, 1887
Streetsville, Ontario, Canada[1]
NationalityCanadian
Political partyLiberal
OccupationBusinessman

Early life

His family came to Canada from County Antrim in Ulster, Ireland in 1822. The four Barber brothers built a woollen mill, foundry and sawmill in Georgetown, Ontario. In 1854, they built a paper mill on the Credit River near Streetsville, Ontario. In 1888, his nephew, John Roaf Barber, upgraded the mill to use hydroelectricity power, one of the early industrial applications of electricity in Canada.

In 1862, Barber built a brick home near Streetsville, Ontario now known as The Old Barber House.

Political career

He was a member of the Legislative Assembly of Ontario for Halton from 1867 to 1875. In 1871 the Liberal Party dropped Barber as their candidate in the upcoming election, due to his support for Premier J. Sandfield Macdonald's self-described "Patent Combination" government.[2] In his stead, the party selected William Durie Lyon and the radical 'Clear Grits' platform he championed. Despite the withdrawal of Liberal support, Barber ran as an independent and successfully fended off Lyon's challenge, largely thanks to the significant Conservative support he had acquired.[3]

Four years after initially deselecting Barber, the Liberal Party readopted him at the 1875 election, thus preventing Lyon from contesting the riding of Halton on behalf of the party.[3]

Following the 1875 election, he was disqualified for having induced a voter to stay home,[4] and a byelection was held on November 15, 1875 which was won by William Durie Lyon.

Electoral record

1867 Ontario general election: Halton
Party Candidate Votes%
LiberalW. Barber1,55656.62
ConservativeSimcoe Kerr1,19243.38
Total valid votes 2,748100.0  
Source: Canadian Parliamentary Companion, 1869[5]
1871 Ontario general election: Halton
Party Candidate Votes%±%
Independent LiberalW. Barber1,19455.98N/A
LiberalW. D. Lyon93944.02-12.60
Total valid votes 2,133100.0  
Source: Canadian Parliamentary Companion, 1874[6]
1875 Ontario general election: Halton
Party Candidate Votes%±%
LiberalW. Barber1,60952.48+8.46
ConservativeWilliam C. Beatty1,45747.52N/A
Total valid votes 3,066100.0  
Source: Canadian Parliamentary Companion, 1875[7]

Further reading

  • Pope, J.H. (1877). Illustrated Historical Atlas of the County of Halton. Toronto: Walker & Miles.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
gollark: Hmm, actually looking at my projects list has reminded me, I should fix my `stack-overflow-import` fork somehow.
gollark: I don't, actually.
gollark: (those are on pastebin anyway)
gollark: And here I was thinking they might want to be forewarned of any mildly evil project I made or something...
gollark: That prompted me to check my stuff, and hydraz/matheus followed me on github for some reason? How odd.

References

  1. "Death of Wm. Barber, Ex-M.P.P." The Acton Free Press. September 1, 1887. p. 2.
  2. Pope 1877, p. 88.
  3. Pope 1877, p. 83.
  4. "Halton Election Trial". The Acton Free Press. September 24, 1875. p. 2.
  5. Henry J. Morgan, ed. (1869). The Canadian parliamentary companion. J. Lovell. p. 159.
  6. Henry J. Morgan, ed. (1874). The Canadian parliamentary companion. J. Lovell.
  7. Henry J. Morgan, ed. (1875). The Canadian parliamentary companion. J. Lovell.


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