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Document Description
Title
The
struggle
for
Responsible
Government
in
Newfoundland
,
1846-1855
Author
Wells
,
Elizabeth
A.
Description
Thesis
(M.A.)--Memorial
University
of
Newfoundland
,
1966.
History
Date
1966
Pagination
ix, 283 leaves : ill., maps.
Subject
Newfoundland
and
Labrador--History--1763-1855;
Newfoundland
and
Labrador--Politics
and
government--1763-1855
Degree
M.A.
Degree Grantor
Memorial University of Newfoundland. Dept. of History
Discipline
History
Language
Eng
Spatial Coverage
Canada--Newfoundland and Labrador
Temporal Coverage
1763-1855
Notes
Bibliography:
leaves
271-283.
Abstract
Newfoundland
Liberals
,
because
they
lacked
dynamic
leadership
when
the
Whigs
were
granting
responsible
government
to the
neighbouring
colonies
, had to
wait
until
1855
for their
share
of
power
and
patronage.
The
1840's
in
Newfoundland
were a
period
of
political
apathy.
Under
the
amalgamated
system
Governor
Harvey
maintained
harmony
and
weakened
party
ties
by
distributing
patronage
to
both
parties
, a
policy
continued
after
the
restoration
of the
bicameral
system
, by his
successor
,
Sir
Gaspard
LeMarchant.
Thus
,
until
1850
, the
Liberals
were
lulled
into
silence
by the
inducements
of
office
, and
political
calm
prevailed.
--
Eventually
economic
discontent
gave
rise
to
political
excitement
which
,
after
1850
,
centred
around
the
question
of
responsible
government.
By
1852
the
Liberals
were
threatening
to
cut
off
supply
, and
denominational
strife
was as
bitter
as
it
had been in the
1830's.
The
reason
for this
renewal
of
politics
was the
rise
to
prominence
of
Philip
Francis
Little
, a
young
Roman
Catholic
lawyer
who
entered
politics
in
1850
to
find
a
few
straggling
reformers
dissatisfied
with the
exclusive
control
of the
local
Conservative
oligarchy.
Supported
by
Dr.
Mullock
, the
outspoken
Roman
Catholic
Bishop
,
Little
quickly
became
the
leader
of a
disciplined
Liberal
party
,
which
refused
to
settle
for
anything
less
than
responsible
government.
--
The
population
of the
colony
was
almost
equally
divided
into
Protestants
,
who
tended
to
support
the
Conservatives
, and
Roman
Catholics
,
who
supported
the
Liberals.
Protestant
Conservatives
,
fearing
the
loss
of their
privileged
position
and the
establishment
of a
permanent
Roman
Catholic
oligarchy
,
opposed
responsible
government.
Roman
Catholics
, on the
other
hand
,
regarded
it
as a
means
of
bettering
their
economic
and
social
position.
The
Conservatives
,
exploiting
the
sectarian
issue
,
depicted
the
question
solely
as the
struggle
of
Roman
Catholics
for
power
and
patronage
,
whereas
the
Liberals
saw
themselves
as the
champions
of the
working
classes
,
regardless
of
denomination.
--
After
the
1852
election
, in
which
responsible
government
was the
main
issue
, the
Liberals
held
a
majority
of
seats
in the
House
of
Assembly.
In
1853
Little
led
a
delegation
to
London
,
which
persuaded
the
Colonial
Secretary
,
against
the
advice
of
Governor
Hamilton
, to
concede
responsible
government.
Even
then its
introduction
was
delayed
by the
failure
of the
Liberal
Assembly
and the
Conservative
Council
to
agree
on the
fulfillment
of
certain
preliminary
conditions
, by the
Governor's
refusal
to
mediate
, and by the
preoccupation
of the
British
government
with the
Crimean
situation.
The
House
of
Assembly
found
it
necessary
to
stop
the
supplies
and to
send
Mr.
Little
across
the
Atlantic
a
second
and a
third
time
before
they
secured
the
removal
of the
obstructive
Mr.
Hamilton
and his
replacement
by
Charles
Henry
Darling
,
whose
ability
and
tact
made
for a
smooth
transition
to
responsible
government.
--
Finally
,
after
a
Liberal
victory
at the
polls
in
May
,
1855
,
P.F.
Little
formed
the
first
responsible
government
, and a
Roman
Catholic
administration
took
office.
Type
Text
Resource Type
Electronic
thesis
or
dissertation
Format
Image/jpeg;
Application/pdf
Source
Paper copy kept in the Centre for Newfoundland Studies, Memorial University Libraries
Local Identifier
76006390
Rights
The author retains copyright ownership and moral rights in this thesis. Neither the thesis nor substantial extracts from it may be printed or otherwise reproduced without the author's permission.
Collection
Electronic
Theses
and
Dissertations
Scanning Status
Completed
PDF File
(36.67
MB)
--
http://collections.mun.ca/PDFs/theses/Wells_ElizabethA.pdf
CONTENTdm file name
93969.cpd