Edgar Nelson Rhodes

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Edgar Nelson Rhodes
Edgar Nelson Rhodes.jpg
10th Premier of Nova Scotia
In office
July 16, 1925 – August 11, 1930
MonarchGeorge V
Lieutenant GovernorJames Robson Douglas
James Cranswick Tory
Preceded byErnest Howard Armstrong
Succeeded byGordon Sidney Harrington
15th Speaker of the House of Commons of Canada
In office
January 18, 1917 – March 5, 1922
MonarchGeorge V
Governor GeneralThe Duke of Devonshire
Baron Byng of Vimy
Prime MinisterSir Robert Laird Borden
Arthur Meighen
Preceded byAlbert Sévigny
Succeeded byRodolphe Lemieux
Senator for Amherst, Nova Scotia
In office
July 20, 1935 – March 15, 1942
Appointed byR. B. Bennett
Member of the Canadian Parliament
for Richmond—West Cape Breton
In office
August 11, 1930 – July 20, 1935
Preceded byJohn Alexander Macdonald
Succeeded byThe electoral district was abolished in 1933.
Member of the Nova Scotia House of Assembly for Hants County
In office
June 25, 1925 – August 11, 1930
Serving with Albert E. Parsons
Preceded byJames W. Reid
John A. Macdonald
Succeeded byAlexander S. MacMillan
Member of the Canadian Parliament
for Cumberland
In office
October 26, 1908 – December 6, 1921
Preceded byHance James Logan
Succeeded byHance James Logan
Personal details
Born(1877-01-05)January 5, 1877
Amherst, Nova Scotia
DiedMarch 15, 1942(1942-03-15) (aged 65)
Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
NationalityCanadian
Political partyConservative Party
Nova Scotia Conservative Party
Spouse(s)Mary Grace Pipes m, 1905
ProfessionLawyer
CabinetFederal:
Minister of Fisheries (1930–1932)
Minister of Finance and Receiver General (1932–1935)

Edgar Nelson Rhodes, PC (January 5, 1877 – March 15, 1942), was a Canadian parliamentarian from Nova Scotia who served as Premier of Nova Scotia from 1925 to 1930.

He was first elected to the House of Commons of Canada in 1908 as a member of the Conservative Party. In January 1917, he became Speaker of the House of Commons of Canada when his predecessor, Albert Sévigny, was appointed to the Canadian Cabinet. Rhodes was retained in the position following the 1917 election that fall, becoming the third Speaker since James Cockburn to preside over more than one Parliament. In 1921, he was made a member of the Queen's Privy Council for Canada before retiring from politics to become president of the , whose previous president had been James Hamet Dunn.

The company failed in 1925, and he returned to provincial politics. Prior to the 1925 provincial election, he was asked to become leader of the Nova Scotia Conservative Party after the leader of the party, W. L. Hall, was assaulted on the waterfront. Rhodes took over the party and led it to victory in the 1925 election. The Conservatives defeated a Liberal government that had been in power for forty-three years but had been, in its last years, wracked by an economic downturn and severe labour unrest among miners in Cape Breton.

Rhodes ran on a Maritime Rights platform, promising to curtail federal influence and stop the exodus of people from the province. The Tories more than doubled their seats in the Nova Scotia House of Assembly, winning forty out of forty-three seats. An important factor in their victory was the failure of the governing Liberals to resolve a long strike by the province's coal miners. When Cape Breton coal miner William Davis was killed by company police in a confrontation on June 11, voters looked to the Tories for solutions. Rhodes engineered a settlement of the dispute and appointed a royal commission. The new government later introduced pensions for teachers and allowances for widowed mothers.

His government also abolished the Legislative Council, the province's appointed Upper House, but first had to go to the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council to obtain permission to appoint enough new members to the Council to secure a vote for its abolition.

The Rhodes government was re-elected in 1928 with a reduced majority. He returned to federal politics to become Minister of Fisheries under Prime Minister R.B. Bennett. From 1932 to 1935, he served as federal Finance Minister, and, despite the Great Depression, handed down austere budgets that increased taxes and reduced spending.

He was appointed to the Senate of Canada three months before the 1935 federal election that routed Bennett's government. He remained a Senator until his death in 1942 in Ottawa. He is buried in Ottawa's Beechwood Cemetery.

On July 12, 1905, he married Mary Grace Pipes, daughter of William Thomas Pipes, Rhodes' law partner and Premier of Nova Scotia from 1882 to 1884. They had one son, Edgar Nelson, and one daughter, Helen Sybil.

Electoral Record[]

1908 Canadian federal election: Cumberland
Party Candidate Votes
Conservative Edgar Nelson Rhodes 4,800
Liberal J. Layton Ralston 4,310
1911 Canadian federal election: Cumberland
Party Candidate Votes
Conservative Edgar Nelson Rhodes 4,780
Liberal Hance James Logan 4,442
1917 Canadian federal election: Cumberland
Party Candidate Votes
Government (Unionist) Edgar Nelson Rhodes 6,655
Opposition (Laurier Liberals) Hance James Logan 5,459
1921 Canadian federal election: Cumberland
Party Candidate Votes
Liberal Hance James Logan 9,762
Conservative Charles Edward Bent 4,407
Progressive James Anderson MacKinnon 3,094

References[]

  • Edgar Nelson Rhodes – Parliament of Canada biography
  • "Hon. Edgar Nelson Rhodes". The Speakers of the Canadian House of Commons. Parliament of Canada.
  • Edgar Nelson Rhodes fonds, Library and Archives Canada
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