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Jean Baptiste Romuald Fiset

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Preceded by
  
George Sylvain

Resigned
  
1897

Party
  
Liberal Party of Canada


Preceded by
  
Louis Adolphe Billy

Name
  
Jean-Baptiste Fiset

Succeeded by
  
Louis Adolphe Billy

Succeeded by
  
Jean Auguste Ross

Children
  
Eugene Fiset

Jean-Baptiste Romuald Fiset

Role
  
Canadian member of Parliament

Died
  
January 5, 1917, Rimouski, Canada

Preceded by
  
Adolphe-Philippe Caron

Succeeded by
  
Adolphe-Philippe Caron

Jean-Baptiste Romuald Fiset (7 February 1843 – 5 January 1917) was a Canadian physician and parliamentarian.

Born in St-Cuthbert, Canada East, the son of Henri Fiset, he was educated at the Collège de Montréal and the Université Laval. Fiset practised medicine at Rimouski. He also served on the town council and was mayor of Rimouski. In 1869, he married Aimée Plamondon.

Fiset was elected five times as the Liberal Member of Parliament representing the Quebec electoral district of Rimouski in the Canadian House of Commons. He was first elected in the Canadian federal election of 1872, and was re-elected in 1874 and 1878. Although he was defeated in 1882, he regained his seat in 1887. This pattern repeated when he lost once again in 1891, but regained his seat a final time in 1896.

A notable moment in his career in the house took place on 30 March 1874 when Fiset guided a hooded Louis Riel into the parliament buildings so that he might sign the parliamentary registry and thereby become an official Member of Parliament. Despite having been elected to parliament as the member for Provencher, Riel at that time was a fugitive because of his role in execution of Thomas Scott during the Red River Rebellion of 1869–1870.

Fiset was appointed to the Canadian Senate on 20 October 1897 on the recommendation of Sir Wilfrid Laurier. He represented the senatorial division of Gulf, Quebec until his death in Rimouski at the age of 73.

References

Jean-Baptiste Romuald Fiset Wikipedia