William F. Lloyd

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Sir William Lloyd in 1918
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Sir William Lloyd in 1918

Sir William Frederick Lloyd (1864-1937) was a newspaper editor and Prime Minister of Newfoundland from 1918 to 1919.

Born in England, Lloyd emigrated to Newfoundland in 1890 where he taught school before becoming a journalist and becoming editor of The Telegram. He was first elected to the Newfoundland House of Assembly in 1904 as a Liberal and became Leader of the opposition in 1916.

Due to a political crisis over conscription the government of Sir Edward Patrick Morris formed a National Government and invited Lloyd to join as Attorney-General. After Morris retired at the end of 1917 the governor asked Lloyd to form a government even though he was from a minority party. Lloyd took over the National Government but in 1919 his minister of finance, Sir Michael Patrick Cashin, who had succeeded Morris as leader of the Newfoundland People's Party moved a Motion of No Confidence and defeated the Lloyd government. Cashin became the new Prime Minister and Lloyd returned to the opposition benches.

Lloyd served again in government, briefly, as minister of justice in 1924.


Preceded by:
Sir Edward Patrick Morris
1909-1917
Premier of Newfoundland
1918-1919
Succeeded by:
Sir Michael Patrick Cashin
1919


First Ministers of Newfoundland Flag of Newfoundland and Labrador

Colonial Prime Ministers & Premiers (1855-1907)

Little | Kent | Hoyles | Carter | Bennett | Carter | Whiteway | Thorburn | Whiteway | Goodridge | Greene | Whiteway | Winter | Bond

Dominion Prime Ministers (1907-1934)

Morris | Lloyd | Cashin | Squires | Warren | Hickman | Monroe | Alderdice | Squires | Alderdice

Commission Governors (1934-1949)

Anderson | Walwyn | Macdonald

Provincial Premiers (1949-present)

Smallwood | Moores | Peckford | Rideout | Wells | Tobin | Tulk | Grimes | Williams