Louis Audet Lapointe

Louis Audet Lapointe
Member of the Canadian Parliament
for St. James
In office
1911–1920
Preceded by Honoré Hippolyte Achille Gervais
Succeeded by Fernand Rinfret
Personal details
Born May 16, 1860
Contrecœur, Canada East
Died February 7, 1920 (aged 59)
Political party Liberal

Louis Audet Lapointe (May 16, 1860 February 7, 1920) was a liquor merchant, wholesaler and political figure in Quebec. He represented St. James in the Canadian House of Commons from 1911 to 1920 as a Liberal.[1]

He was born in Contrecœur, Canada East, the son of Louis Audet-Lapointe and Marguerite-Adéas Dupré, and was educated in Terrebonne, at the Collège de Varennes and at the Montreal Business College. In 1879, he married Léocadie-Azilda Brunet.[2] He served as a member of the city council for Montreal from 1900 to 1916. He was re-elected in 1917 as a Laurier Liberal. Audet-Lapointe died in office at the age of 59.[1]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Louis Audet Lapointe – Parliament of Canada biography
  2. Audet, Francis-Joseph (1940). Contrecoeur : famille, seigneurie, paroisse, village (in French). p. 65. Retrieved 2009-08-15.