Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

Ernest Howard Armstrong

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Monarch
  
George V

Political party
  
Liberal

Party
  
Nova Scotia Liberal Party

Preceded by
  
Frank E. Smith

Role
  
Canadian Politician


Preceded by
  
George G. Sanderson

Name
  
Ernest Armstrong

Preceded by
  
George Henry Murray

Occupation
  
lawyer, journalist

Succeeded by
  
Edgar Nelson Rhodes

Born
  
July 27, 1864 Kingston, Nova Scotia (
1864-07-27
)

Died
  
February 15, 1946, Bridgewater, Canada

Education
  
Schulich School of Law, Acadia University

Lieutenant governor
  
MacCallum Grant, James Robson Douglas

Ernest Howard Armstrong, KC (July 27, 1864 – February 15, 1946) was a Canadian politician and journalist who served as the ninth Premier of Nova Scotia from 1923 to 1925.

Contents

Birth date and education

Born in Kingston, Nova Scotia, the son of Edward and Sarah A. (Currell) Armstrong, Armstrong studied at Acadia University and Dalhousie University where he received a Bachelor of Laws degree.

Career

He was created King's Counsel in 1907. He practiced law in Weymouth, Nova Scotia from 1889 to 1892, and during that period he was also editor of the Weymouth Free Press.

In 1892, he moved to Yarmouth, Nova Scotia where he held the office of vice and deputy United States Consul from 1894 to 1906. He was elected to the town council in 1900 and was the mayor of Yarmouth from 1904 to 1906 when he won a seat in the Nova Scotia House of Assembly. He joined the cabinet of Liberal Premier George H. Murray in 1911 serving as minister of public works and then as minister of mines.

In 1923, Armstrong succeeded Murray as Premier inheriting a Liberal government that had been in power for forty years. Armstrong was unable to overcome the effects of a serious economic downturn in the region, underestimated the strength of the Maritime Rights Movement and the feelings of alienation among Nova Scotians and also mishandled labour unrest in Cape Breton all of which led to the defeat of his government in the 1925 election. The Liberals won only three seats out of forty-three in the legislature. He died in Bridgewater, Nova Scotia.

References

Ernest Howard Armstrong Wikipedia