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Edward Barron Chandler

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Monarch
  
Preceded by
  
New position

Name
  
Edward Chandler


Role
  
Politician

Monarch
  
Edward Barron Chandler wwwcanadahistorycomsectionserasconfederation

Governor General
  
The Earl of DufferinMarquess of Lorne

Died
  
February 6, 1880, Fredericton, Canada

Political party
  
Conservative Party of Canada

Lieutenant governor
  
Edmund Walker Head, John Manners-Sutton, 3rd Viscount Canterbury

Preceded by
  
Succeeded by
  

Edward Barron Chandler (August 22, 1800 – February 6, 1880) was a New Brunswick politician and lawyer from a United Empire Loyalist family. He was one of the Fathers of Confederation.

Edward Barron Chandler Edward Barron Chandler The Canadian Encyclopedia

Chandler was born in Amherst, Nova Scotia and moved to New Brunswick to study law. He moved to Dorchester, New Brunswick and served in the colony's government. In 1827 he was elected to the New Brunswick legislature as an opponent of responsible government and later served on the province's Legislative Council (the legislature's Upper House) and in Cabinet serving as leader of the "compact" government that ruled the colony from 1848 to 1854 prior to the institution of responsible government.

Edward Barron Chandler Biography CHANDLER EDWARD BARRON Volume X 18711880

In 1836 Chandler became a member of New Brunswick's Legislative Council.

Edward Barron Chandler Edward Barron Chandler Sr 1800 1880 Find A Grave Memorial

Later, Chandler was a New Brunswick delegate to the conferences in London, Charlottetown, and Quebec that led to Canadian confederation. Though he supported the federal Conservatives of Sir John A. Macdonald he was a cautious supporter who opposed a strong central government.

Edward Barron Chandler Biography CHANDLER EDWARD BARRON Volume X 18711880

Chandler was a supporter of railway development and was instrumental as a federally appointed commissioner overseeing construction of the Intercolonial Railway in having its surveys diverted from a direct route between Amherst and Moncton to run through his community of Dorchester. He also supported the policy of reciprocity with the United States. He refused an appointment to the Canadian Senate but accepted an appointment as the fifth Lieutenant Governor of New Brunswick in 1878. He died in Fredericton in 1880.

Chandler's home in Dorchester, Chandler House or Rocklyn, was designated a National Historic Site of Canada in 1971.

References

Edward Barron Chandler Wikipedia