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Charles Boucher de Boucherville

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Monarch
  
Preceded by
  
Gedeon Ouimet

Name
  
Charles de


Monarch
  
Role
  
Legislator

Preceded by
  
Honore Mercier

Education
  

Succeeded by
  
Henri-Gustave Joly de Lotbiniere

Died
  
September 10, 1915, Montreal, Canada

Political party
  
Spouse
  
Esther Lussier (m. 1866), Susan Morrogh (m. 1861)

Lieutenant governor
  
Rene-Edouard Caron, Luc Letellier de St-Just, Auguste-Real Angers, Joseph-Adolphe Chapleau

Succeeded by
  

Sir Charles-Eugène-Napoléon Boucher de Boucherville, KCMG (May 4, 1822 – September 10, 1915) was born in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. He twice served as the third Premier of Quebec.

Descended from Pierre Boucher, he was one of the three children of Pierre Boucher de Boucherville (1780–1857), Seigneur of Boucherville, and Marguerite-Émilie de Bleury (1786–1812), sister of Clément-Charles Sabrevois de Bleury.

Boucher de Boucherville took his MD from McGill University, graduating with an MD in 1843. During the Chauveau administration, he served as Speaker of the Legislative Council. He became premier in 1874 when his predecessor, Gédéon Ouimet, had to resign due to a financial scandal. He then won the 1875 Quebec election, but was removed from office on March 8, 1878 in a conflict with Lieutenant Governor Luc Letellier de Saint-Just. Letellier de Saint-Just refused to approve legislation that had been passed by both houses of the Quebec legislature that would have forced municipalities to pay for railway construction. The Lieutenant-Governor deposed Boucher de Boucherville, and called on the Leader of the Opposition, Henri-Gustave Joly de Lotbinière, to form a government.

Boucher de Boucherville's second term came about after Honoré Mercier was removed from office by Lieutenant Governor Auguste-Réal Angers on December 16, 1891 on charges of corruption. Mercier was later cleared.

After Conservative leader Louis-Olivier Taillon had lost the 1890 election and his own seat, Jean Blanchet had taken over as Leader of the Opposition to the Mercier government. Blanchet, however, had resigned on September 19, 1891, to accept an appointment as a judge. The Lieutenant Governor therefore needed a Conservative to fill the post of premier, and turned to Boucher de Boucherville.

Boucher de Boucherville served for one year, but resigned when former Conservative premier Joseph-Adolphe Chapleau was appointed Lieutenant-Governor in December 1892. Relations between the two may have been strained. By 1915 the oldest legislator in North America, he died that year in Montreal at the Deaf and Dumb Institute, in whose work he was so interested that he lived there.

Elections as party leader

He won the 1875 election.

References

Charles Boucher de Boucherville Wikipedia


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