Alphonse Desjardins (politician)
| The Honourable Alphonse Desjardins KPO PC | |
|---|---|
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| 22nd Mayor of Montreal | |
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In office 1893–1894 | |
| Preceded by | James McShane |
| Succeeded by | Joseph-Octave Villeneuve |
| Member of the Canadian Parliament for Hochelaga | |
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In office 1874–1892 | |
| Preceded by | Louis Beaubien |
| Succeeded by | Séverin Lachapelle |
| Senator for De Lorimier, Quebec | |
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In office 1892–1896 | |
| Appointed by | John Abbott |
| Preceded by | Alexandre Lacoste |
| Succeeded by | François Béchard |
| Minister of Militia and Defence | |
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In office 15 January 1896 – 27 April 1896 | |
| Prime Minister | Mackenzie Bowell |
| Preceded by | Mackenzie Bowell |
| Succeeded by | David Tisdale |
| Personal details | |
| Born |
6 May 1841 Terrebonne, Province of Canada |
| Died |
4 June 1912 (aged 71) Terrebonne, Quebec, Canada |
| Profession | businessman, journalist, lawyer |
Alphonse Desjardins, PC, KPO (6 May 1841 – 4 June 1912) was born in Terrebonne, Quebec and was mayor of Montreal from 1893 to 1894 and later a Canadian cabinet minister. He married Virginie Paré in 1864 and remarried Hortense Barsalou in 1880.
He was a lawyer, journalist, businessman and politician. He owned a tile factory and participated in the founding of the Banque Jacques-Cartier, which later became part of the National Bank of Canada. He represented the riding of Hochelaga in the House of Commons for 18 years, serving as a cabinet minister and Minister of Militia and Defence for a few months at the end of the Mackenzie Bowell government and then the short-lived Tupper government in 1896. He was named a senator in 1892. He became mayor of Montreal from 1893–1894. For a time he held all three posts (member of the House of Commons, Senator, mayor) simultaneously.
In 1872, he was created a Knight of the Order of Pius IX in acknowledgment of his services to the Catholic Church.
Gallery
References
- Alphonse Desjardins – Parliament of Canada biography
- "Alphonse Desjardins". Dictionary of Canadian Biography (online ed.). University of Toronto Press. 1979–2005.
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