Richard William Scott

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Hon. Sir Richard William Scott
Richard William Scott

Sir Richard William Scott


In office
1852 – 1853
Preceded by Charles Sparrow
Succeeded by J. B. Turgeon

Born February 24, 1825(1825-02-24)
Prescott, Upper Canada
Died April 23, 1913 (aged 88)
Ottawa
Political party Liberal Party of Canada
Spouse Mary Ann Heron
Religion Roman Catholicism

Sir Richard William Scott, PC , KC (February 24, 1825April 23, 1913) was a Canadian politician and cabinet minister.

He was born in Prescott, Ontario in 1825. A lawyer by training, Scott was admitted to the bar in 1848 and established a practice in Bytown (now Ottawa). He became a member of municipal council in 1851, was mayor of Bytown in 1852, and held a seat in the Legislative Assembly of the Province of Canada from 1857 until 1863. With Canadian Confederation, Scott won a seat in the Ontario legislature as a Liberal representing Ottawa from 1867 to 1871. He was Speaker of the legislature briefly in December 1871 before being appointed to the provincial cabinet as Commissioner of Crown Lands. Scott played a leading role in passing legislation ensuring the rights of separate schools in Ontario.

In November 1873, he left provincial politics when he was appointed minister without portfolio by Alexander Mackenzie in the federal Cabinet. Mackenzie had become prime minister after Sir John A. Macdonald's government had been forced to resign due to the Pacific Scandal. Scott was appointed to the Canadian Senate by Mackenzie in January 1874, and became Secretary of State for Canada and Leader of the Government in the Senate. A supporter of temperance, he drafted the "Scott Act" which allowed any county or municipality in Canada to prohibit the retail sale of liquor by majority vote. With the defeat of the Liberal government in the 1878 election, Scott became Leader of the Opposition in the Senate until the return of the Liberals to government under Wilfrid Laurier. Scott resumed his old Cabinet position of Secretary of State. Scott retired from the cabinet in 1908, but remained in the Senate until his death in 1913.

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Legislative Assembly of Ontario
Preceded by
None
Member of the Legislative Assembly of Ontario from Ottawa
1867–1874
Succeeded by
Daniel John O'Donoghue
Government offices
Preceded by
Alexander Campbell
Leader of the Opposition in the Senate of Canada
1896–1906
Succeeded by
Mackenzie Bowell