Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Horatio Clarence Hocken

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Appointed by
  
R. B. Bennett

Role
  
Canadian Politician

Preceded by
  
Edmund Boyd Osler

Died
  
February 18, 1937


Succeeded by
  
Samuel Factor

Name
  
Horatio Hocken

Resigned
  
February 18, 1937

Horatio Clarence Hocken mediasvcancestrycomimage45573a05fb8d4934bdb

Preceded by
  
The riding was created in 1924.

Born
  
October 12, 1857 Toronto, Canada West (
1857-10-12
)

Political party
  
Unionist Party, Conservative Party of Canada

Preceded by
  
George Reginald Geary

Horatio Clarence Hocken (October 12, 1857 – February 18, 1937) was a Canadian politician, Mayor of Toronto, social reformer, a founder of what became the Toronto Star and Grand Master of the Grand Orange Lodge of British America from 1914-1918.

Contents

Born in Toronto in what was pre-Confederation Canada West, Hocken had a media career as a printer, publisher and journalist. After working as a typesetter at the Toronto Globe at which he led a strike, Hocken, in 1892, Hocken was a foremen in the print room of the Toronto News when the Typographical Union went on strike. He and 20 other strikers founded the Evening Star as a strike paper with Hocken as the new paper's business manager. He subsequently left the Star and returned to the News where he became city editor. In 1905 he purchased The Orange Sentinel, a weekly newspaper serving supporters of the Orange Order.

Local politics

He served on the Toronto Board of Control from 1907 until 1910 when he made his first unsuccessful bid for the mayor's office and again from 1911 until 1912. He served as mayor from 1912 to 1914. He is credited with approving the Bloor Viaduct. As mayor, Hocken supported opening city parks to public use rather than being restricted to the use of athletic societies arguing that parks are for "walking in, not for athletic sports". He built public baths, installed a sewage treatment plant and a filtration plant, and the extension of the sewer system. Hocken's term also saw the distribution of free milk to children living in slums and the establishment of a public health nursing program. His reforms saw the death rate from communicable disease drop from 114 per 100,000 to 27 per 100,000. Hocken also supported the creation of a public housing company that built houses and rented them for cost. The city, under his stewardship, also purchased an abattoir and cold storage facility to help keep small butchers from being driven out of business by "the great meat trust."

Federal politics

Hocken's career in federal politics began when he was elected to the Canadian House of Commons for the Unionist Party at the Toronto West riding in the 1917 federal election. He was re-elected in Toronto West in the 1921 federal election, this time under the Conservative Party. When the riding boundaries were changed in 1924, he was re-elected in the Toronto West Centre riding in the 1925 and 1926 federal elections. He served in the 13th to the 16th Canadian Parliaments consecutively until he left federal politics in 1930.

Hocken was appointed a member of the Senate of Canada from 30 December 1933 and remained in that office until death.

Personal life

He married Isabella Page in 1880. They had four children. He died two days after she did.

References

Horatio Clarence Hocken Wikipedia