James Cockburn (Ontario politician) explained

James Cockburn
Constituency Mp1:Northumberland West
Parliament1:Canadian
Successor1:William Kerr
Term Start1:1867
Term End1:1874
Predecessor2:William Kerr
Successor2:George Guillet
Term Start2:1878
Term End2:1881
Office:1st Speaker of the House of Commons of Canada
Term Start:November 6, 1867
Term End:March 25, 1875
Governor General:The Viscount Monck
The Lord Lisgar
Primeminister:Sir John A. Macdonald
Successor:Timothy Anglin
Birth Date:13 February 1819
Birth Place:Berwick-upon-Tweed, United Kingdom
Death Place:Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
Restingplace:St. James Cemetery, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Party:Conservative

James W. Cockburn (February 13, 1819  - August 14, 1883) was a Canadian Conservative politician, and a father of Canadian Confederation.

Early life

He was born in Berwick-Upon-Tweed on the EnglishScottish border and immigrated to Canada with his father, James Cockburn Snr. (1787–1832), mother, Sarah Turnbull (1797–1866) and brother, Adam (1820–1860), at the age of 13. After attending Upper Canada College and Osgoode Hall, he established a law practice in Cobourg, Ontario.

Career

In the 1850s, Cockburn was elected to the town council. In 1861, he was elected to the Province of Canada's legislative assembly as a Reformer representing Northumberland West. Despite elected as an opponent of the MacdonaldCartier administration, Cockburn switched allegiances and became a supporter of Macdonald's Liberal-Conservative Party.

Cockburn attended the Quebec Conference of 1864 as a supporter of Confederation. After Confederation, he was elected to the new House of Commons of Canada in the country's first election. He was nominated by Sir John A. Macdonald to be Canada's first Speaker of the House of Commons, a position in which he served from 1867 to 1874.

His performance as Speaker was hindered by the fact that he spoke no French in a chamber in which both English and French were official languages.[1] He did however understand French. In 1872, Cockburn was nominated for a second term as Speaker despite reservations by the Opposition that he had been too favourable to the government in his rulings. Cockburn lost his seat in the 1874 election that had been precipitated by the Pacific Scandal and that brought down the Macdonald government.

Cockburn won back his former seat in the 1878 election but did not take an active role in Parliament. He resigned in 1881 when he was appointed to collect and classify Canadian statutes but this assignment was cut short by his death.

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Death

Cockburn died on August 14, 1883, from sickness. He is buried in St. James Cemetery, in Toronto.

Personal life

He married Isabella Susan Patterson in 1854 and they had three children: Sarah Isabella Cockburn, Francis Cockburn and May Cockburn.

References

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Biography – COCKBURN, JAMES – Volume XI (1881-1890) – Dictionary of Canadian Biography. www.biographi.ca. 2020-01-29.