Alberta general election, 1905

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The Alberta general election of 1905 was the first general election held in the Province of Alberta, Canada. It was held on November 9, 1905 to elect members of the Alberta legislature to the 1st Alberta Legislative Assembly, shortly after the province was created out of the Northwest Territories on September 1, 1905.

The Alberta Liberal Party of Alexander C. Rutherford won twenty three of the twenty five seats in the new legislature, defeating the Conservative Party, which was led by a young lawyer, Richard Bennett, who later served as Prime Minister of Canada.

Prior to the 1905 election the two political parties saw numerous changes and defections, In Alberta a host of former Liberal-Conservative MLA's jumped ship to the Liberals, when Sir Wilfrid Laurier appointed the Liberal provisional government prior to the election. The Conservatives had no strong leader to rally around at the time as Frederick Haultain, had moved to Saskatchewan.

The election in 1905 was a bitter one, especially in Calgary and Southern Alberta where the Liberals were accused of vote tampering and interfering with Conservative voters. Recounts especially in Calgary took almost a month and saw the result swing back and forth. The scandal led to the arrest of some key Liberal organizers, including William Cushing's campaign manager, who had been a returning officer at a Calgary polling station.

Contents

[edit] Results

Party Party Leader Candidates[1] Elected Popular Vote
# %
     Liberal
Alexander C. Rutherford
261 23 14,4853 57.56%
     Conservative
Richard Bennett
232 2 9,3163 37.13%
     Independent 7 - 1,336 5.31%
     Labor 2 - 843 %
Total 56 25 25,163 100%
Source: Elections Alberta
Alberta electoral results
Alberta electoral results

Note:

  1. 2 Liberals contested the Peace River district after the results were voided.
  2. Conservative L. Dubuc only contested the original Peace River election.
  3. Vote returns for the first Peace River election are not included in totals.

[edit] Members of the Legislative Assembly elected

For complete electoral history, see individual districts

1st Alberta Legislative Assembly
  District Member Party
     Athabasca William Bredin Liberal
     Banff Charles W. Fisher Liberal
     Calgary William Cushing Liberal
     Cardston John William Woolf Liberal
     Edmonton Charles Wilson Cross Liberal
     Gleichen Charles Stuart Liberal
     High River Albert Robertson Conservative
     Innisfail John A. Simpson Liberal
     Lacombe William Puffer Liberal
     Leduc Robert Telford Liberal
     Lethbridge Leverett DeVeber Liberal
     Macleod Malcolm McKenzie Liberal
     Medicine Hat William Finlay Liberal
     Pincher Creek John Plummer Marcellus Liberal
     Ponoka John R. McLeod Liberal
     Red Deer John T. Moore Liberal
     Rosebud Cornelius Hiebert Conservative
     St. Albert Henry William McKenney Liberal
     Stony Plain John McPherson Liberal
     Strathcona Alexander Cameron Rutherford Liberal
     Sturgeon John R. Boyle Liberal
     Vermillion Matthew McCauley Liberal
     Victoria Francis A. Walker Liberal
     Wetaskiwin Anthony Rosenroll Liberal

[edit] Peace River

James Cornwall was declared elected to the Peace River district on election night 1905 for the Liberal Party. The election results were overturned by significant irregularities leaving the seat vacant. A new election was held on February 15, 1906.

Thomas Brick declared his candidacy in the new election for the Liberals after being asked to run by a large group of people whom appeared at his homestead. He faced James Cornwall who attempted to re-win his seat and he also ran under the Liberal banner. The runner up candidate from the original 1905 election Conservative L. Dubuc did not run again leaving a weird two way race under the same party banner. Thomas Brick would go on to defeat James Cornwall in a landslide.[2]


  District Member Party
Election Night
     Peace River James Cornwall Liberal
February 15, 1906
     Peace River Thomas Brick Liberal

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ Members elected to first legislature November 17, 1905. Alberta Advocate. Retrieved on 2007-03-18.
  2. ^ Yvette T. M. Mahé. I remember Peace River, Alberta and adjacent districts. Part I. The Women's Institute of Peace River. Retrieved on 2007-03-18.


Preceded by
1902 Northwest Territories election
Alberta elections Succeeded by
1909 Alberta election
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