1847 Bytown municipal election explained

Election Name:1847 Bytown municipal election
Type:presidential
Ongoing:no
Next Election:1848 Bytown municipal election
Next Year:1848
Election Date:September 11, 1847
Party1:Reform
Nominee1:John Scott
Electoral Vote1:4
Color1:ED1D24
Party2:Tory
Nominee2:John Bower Lewis
Electoral Vote2:3
Color2:073ED1
Mayor
Before Election:None
After Election:John Scott

The newly incorporated Town of Bytown, Canada West (now Ottawa) held a municipal election on September 11, 1847 to elect members of the first Bytown Town Council. Franchise was granted to men over the age of 21 who were freeholders with a land value of at least £30, tenants with an annual rent of at least £10, or leaseholders who had built a house with an annual rent of at least £10.[1]

Town Council

For the election, Bytown was divided into three wards, West, North and South. West Ward, consisting of the Upper Town portion of the town (now Downtown Ottawa) returned three councillors, while the North and South wards located in Lower Town returned two councillors each. Lower Town had a slight majority of councillors, but this did not fully reflect their large majority in numbers of householders. West Ward had three councillors for 234 householders, while the Lower Town wards had four councillors for 645 householders. This gerrymander was said to support the Tories living in Upper Town at the expense of the Reformers in Lower Town. Further, the division of Lower Town into two wards was seen as an attempt to divide the Francophone and Irish communities and commercial interests.[2]

North Ward (2 to be elected)
CandidateVotes%
Henry J. Friel 131 38.19
John Bedard 109 31.78
103 30.03
South Ward (2 to be elected)
CandidateVotes%
Thomas Corcoran 92 42.40
John Scott 92 42.40
Andrew* Main 33 15.21
West Ward (3 to be elected)
CandidateVotes%
John Bower Lewis 89 28.53
Nicholas Sparks 78 25.00
Nathaniel Sherrald Blasdell 63 20.19
W. N.* Burrows 42 13.46
Robert* Stanley 28 8.97
James* Kennedy 9 2.88
Lyman* Perkins 3 0.96

* First names of candidates were omitted from the source document, so in these cases candidates' first names or initials were taken from 1851 Bytown Canada Directory, assuming they were the same people[3]

Mayor

On September 18, after the council election, the members voted for a mayor from among their ranks. The Tory councillors from Upper Town supported John Bower Lewis, and the Reform councillors from Lower Town supported John Scott. As Lower Town had four members to Upper Town's three, Scott was elected mayor.

References

Notes and References

  1. https://bnald.lib.unb.ca/sites/default/files/UnC_1847_cap%2043_edited.pdf{{Dead link|date=May 2020 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}
  2. Book: Ottawa: An Illustrated History. 9780888629807. Taylor. John H.. 1986.
  3. Web site: 1851 Bytown Canada Directory.