Charles-Napoléon Dorion Explained

Charles-Napoléon Dorion
Birth Date:1887 8, df=yes
Birth Place:Rivière-du-Loup, Quebec
Death Place:Courville, Quebec
Riding:Québec—Montmorency
Predecessor:Henri-Edgar Lavigueur
Successor:Wilfrid Lacroix
Term Start:July 1930
Term End:October 1935
Profession:lawyer
Party:Conservative

Charles-Napoléon Dorion, (13 August 1887  - 3 December 1978) was a Quebec lawyer and politician.

He was born in Rivière-du-Loup, Quebec and admitted to the Quebec bar in July 1914. He practiced law in Quebec City with his brothers Frédéric Dorion and Noël Dorion as well as with Lucien Lacasse. Dorion was appointed King's Counsel in 1934.[1]

In his political life he was mayor of Courville, Quebec from 1926 to 1934. He first ran as a Conservative candidate in Québec—Montmorency in the 1926 federal election but was defeated. He was elected on his second attempt in 1930 and served in the House of Commons of Canada for five years before being defeated in the 1935 federal election.[1] In 1940, he was elected president of the Law Society of Quebec.[1]

His brothers Frédéric and Noël also served as Members of Parliament at various times.

External links

Notes and References

  1. https://archive.today/20130101070116/http://www.barreau.qc.ca/quebec/1/7/1_7_10.asp Law Society biography