Daniel Lionel Hanington Explained

Daniel Lionel Hanington should not be confused with Daniel Lionel Hanington (Royal Canadian Navy officer).

Daniel Lionel Hanington
Order:6th Premier of New Brunswick
Term Start:May 25, 1882
Term End:March 3, 1883
Predecessor:John J. Fraser
Successor:Andrew G. Blair
Lieutenant Governor:Robert Duncan Wilmot
Office1:MLA for Westmorland
Term Start1:December 26, 1870
Term End1:June 18, 1874
Successor1:Edward J. Smith
Alongside1:Joseph Lytle Moore, John A. Humphrey, Pierre-Amand Landry, Thomas Pickard, Angus McQueen
Term Start2:June 25, 1878
Term End2:April 1, 1892
Successor2:Amasa E. Killam
Alongside2:Amasa E. Killam, Charles A. Black, Joseph Laurence Black, Olivier-Maximin Melanson, Pierre-Amand Landry, Henry Absalom Powell, Joseph A. McQueen, Joseph Laurence Black, John A. Humphrey, H.T. Stevens, Henry Absalom Powell
Birth Date:June 27, 1835
Birth Place:Shediac, New Brunswick, British North America
Death Place:Dorchester, New Brunswick, Canada
Party:Conservative
Relations:Daniel Hanington (father)
Alma Mater:Mount Allison Academy
Occupation:lawyer and jurist
Profession:politician

Daniel Lionel Hanington (June 27, 1835  - May 5, 1909) was a New Brunswick, Canada politician and jurist.

He was born at Shediac, New Brunswick, the son of Daniel Hanington, and was educated there and at Mount Allison Academy in Sackville. He went on to study law and was called to the New Brunswick bar in 1861. In that same year, he married Emily Myers Wetmore. He served as a school trustee for several years and was clerk for the Westmorland County court from 1867 to 1870.

Hanington ran unsuccessfully for a seat in the provincial legislature for Westmorland in 1870 but was elected in an 1870 by-election as a Liberal-Conservative. He was defeated in 1874 then regained his seat in 1878 and entered the cabinet of Premier John James Fraser as minister without portfolio and succeeded Fraser as premier in 1882. Hanington was sympathetic to Acadian rights and appointed a member of that community, Pierre-Amand Landry, to the senior cabinet position of provincial secretary. However, Hanington faced a leader of the opposition, Andrew G. Blair who had organised the Liberal Party into a powerful force. In 1883, Blair defeated Hanington's Conservative government in a Motion of No Confidence and won the subsequent election. Hanington continued as leader of the opposition but was unable to defeat Blair's Liberals in the 1886 election. He remained in the legislature until 1892 and, in 1896, he accepted an appointment to the bench as a member of the province's Supreme Court.

He was the presiding judge at the last trial of Tom Collins.

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