Simon Fraser Tolmie
Simon Fraser Tolmie | |
---|---|
Canadian Parliament for Victoria | |
In office 29 October 1925 – 5 June 1928 | |
Preceded by | New District |
Succeeded by | D'Arcy Plunkett |
In office 8 June 1936 – 13 October 1937 | |
Preceded by | D'Arcy Plunkett |
Succeeded by | Robert Mayhew |
Personal details | |
Born | Minister of Agriculture (1919–1921, 1926) | 25 January 1867
Simon Fraser Tolmie, PC (25 January 1867 – 13 October 1937) was a veterinarian, farmer, politician, and the 21st premier of British Columbia, Canada.
Early life
Tolmie had a pioneer lineage, which aided him in his political aspirations. He was the son of Dr. William Fraser Tolmie, a prominent figure in the Hudson's Bay Company and a member of both the colonial assembly of Colony of Vancouver Island and the Legislative Assembly of British Columbia. William Fraser was early supporter of Scottish industrialist reformer Robert Owen, and was a strong supporter of women's suffrage in British Columbia. His maternal ancestry was Métis and representative of the marriages of First Nations women and French and Scottish men who worked in the fur trade. Tolmie's mother, Jane Work, was the daughter of John Work, a prominent Victoria resident, Hudson's Bay Company Chief Factor, and member of the former colony's assembly. Jane's mother was Josette Legace, a Métis daughter of a First Nations woman from the Spokane area and Pierre Legace, a French-Canadian trapper father. Born in Victoria, Tolmie spent his early life on his family's vast farm, Cloverdale (the Victoria neighbourhood bears its name). He graduated from the Ontario Veterinary College in 1891 and later became the Dominion Inspector of Livestock.
Early political career
Tolmie entered federal politics in the
Tolmie was part of a general anti-drug panic in 1922 with severe racist overtones. He supported amendments to drug laws calling for the deportation of all Asians convicted of trafficking and for the use of the 'lash'.[2]
Premier of British Columbia
Tolmie was elected leader of the
Like their federal counterparts, who returned to power in 1930, Tolmie's Tories' commitment to applying "business principles to the business of government," rebounded to their disadvantage when the Great Depression hit. By 1931, unemployment reached 28% - the highest in Canada - and Tolmie was finally forced to act, setting up remote relief camps. Tolmie acceded to the request from the business community that a royal commission be established to propose solutions to the province's increasingly dire financial situation. The Kidd Report, issued in 1932, recommended such sharp cuts to social services that mainstream British Columbians were enraged. They had come to expect more from their provincial government than its traditional functions of maintaining law and order, providing physical infrastructure and encouraging private enterprise.[citation needed]
The strained situation took its toll on the provincial party, which became so wracked by internal discord that the executive decided to run no candidates in the
Later life
Tolmie returned to politics three years later, returning to his old federal seat of Victoria in a 1936 by-election. He died in Victoria a little over a year later.
Tolmie led the last Conservative provincial government in British Columbia.
References
- ^ "Simon Fraser Tolmie 1867-1937 - Ancestry®".
- ^ Carstairs, C., 1999. Deporting "Ah Sin" to save the white race: Moral panic, racialization, and the extension of Canadian drug laws in the 1920s. Canadian Bulletin of Medical History, 16(1), pp.65-88