Peter Heenan Explained

Honorific-Prefix:The Honourable
Peter Heenan
Office1:MPP for Kenora
Term Start1:October 20, 1919
Term End1:October 18, 1926
Predecessor1:Harold Machin
Successor1:Joseph Earngey
Office2:Member of Parliament for Kenora—Rainy River
Term Start2:October 29, 1925
Term End2:July 3, 1934
Predecessor2:New riding
Successor2:Hugh Bathgate McKinnon
Office3:MPP for Kenora
Term Start3:August 7, 1934
Term End3:June 30, 1943
Predecessor3:Earl Hutchinson
Successor3:William Manson Docker
Office4:Minister of Labour for Canada
Term Start4:September 25, 1926
Term End4:August 7, 1930
Predecessor4:George Burpee Jones
Successor4:Gideon Decker Robertson
Office5:Minister of Lands and Forests for Ontario
Term Start5:July 10, 1934
Term End5:May 27, 1941
Predecessor5:William Finlayson
Successor5:Norman Otto Hipel
Office6:Minister of Labour for Ontario
Term Start6:June 14, 1938
Term End6:September 2, 1938
Predecessor6:Morrison Mann MacBride
Successor6:Norman Otto Hipel
Office7:Minister of Labour for Ontario
Term Start7:May 27, 1941
Term End7:August 17, 1943
Predecessor7:Norman Otto Hipel
Successor7:Charles Daley
Birth Date:February 19, 1875
Birth Place:Tullaree, near Newcastle, County Down, Ireland
Death Place:Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Party:Labour Party of Canada (to 1926)
Liberal Party of Canada
Ontario Liberal Party
Spouse:Annie Fawcett
Profession:Coal miner, diver, locomotive engineer, union leader

Peter Heenan, (February 19, 1875  - May 12, 1948) was a Canadian union leader and politician, and also served as a cabinet minister at the federal and provincial levels.

Early life

Born in Tullaree, near Newcastle, County Down, Ireland,[1] Heenan worked as a pit boy at St Helen's Colliery in Cumberland, where he tested work on the mine's railways, and then worked on the Costa Rica Railway in Central America. An attack of yellow fever forced Heenan to move to Canada in 1902, where he first worked on a Western ranch, and then as a locomotive engineer for the Canadian Pacific Railway on the run between Winnipeg and Kenora. The experience he had acquired in Costa Rica as a diver also proved useful when he was called to help out in a train wreck just outside Kenora, where the locomotive had plunged down underwater.

Heenan became involved in the labour movement in Northwestern Ontario, becoming its most prominent leader by the beginning of World War I. He also became an alderman on Kenora's town council, serving for five years, and was also chairman of the local public utilities commission for two years.[2]

Political career

Labour MPP in Ontario (1919-1926)

Elected to the Legislative Assembly of Ontario as the Labour candidate for the riding of Kenora in the 1919 election, Heenan was re-elected in 1923. When the Legislature was not in session, he would resume driving locomotives.[2]

Under Heenan's leadership, the Labour MPPs joined with the United Farmers of Ontario to form a coalition government under E.C. Drury, with the understanding that Drury would support Edward Wellington Backus' plans for erecting a newsprint mill in Kenora. Heenan was also instrumental in getting Harry Mills appointed as the Province's first Minister of Mines.[3]

Liberal MP and federal Minister of Labour (1926-1934)

He was elected as the Liberal candidate to the House of Commons of Canada representing the riding of Kenora—Rainy River in the 1925 federal election. He was re-elected in 1926 and 1930. From 1926 to 1930, he was the Minister of Labour, and became known as "Peter the Peacemaker" for settling 160 labour disputes in his first three years.[2] He secured the passage of the Mother's Allowance Act and the Old Age Pensions Act.[4]

Heenan still found time to work as a locomotive engineer when the House was not in session.[5] In 1934, during a debate, he exclaimed, "I wanted to be unique. I wanted to be the only man that the Conservatives have put into overalls."[6]

Liberal MPP and Ontario Cabinet Minister (1934-1943)

Heenan resigned his federal seat, after winning a provincial seat as the Liberal Party of Ontario candidate in the 1934 election for the riding of Kenora. He was re-elected in 1937. From 1934 to 1941, he was the Minister of Lands and Forests in the provincial government of Mitchell Hepburn. Heenan was charged with promoting Hepburn's policies on natural resource development, including the aggressive position with respect to timber licenses in Northern Ontario that were being held by companies that would not (or could not) cut wood on them. In that regard, in 1936 the Forest Resources Regulation Act was passed that granted the government broad powers for mandating minimum production quotas, maximum limits in line with good forestry practice, reducing licensed acreages where they were in excess of requirements, and increasing stumpage fees on companies "operating or carrying on business in a manner detrimental to the public interest."[7] Great Lakes Paper saw its holdings reduced from 23085km2 to 3668km2, and was assessed a $500,000 penalty ($ in current terms) for refusing to participate in a minimum price agreement set up by the Ontario and Quebec governments.[8]

He also sought to exploit other uses for provincial lands. In 1941, he announced that one-seventh of all Crown land, amounting to 2000000acres, was being made available for lease to individuals, sportsmen's clubs and commercial camp owners.[9]

The 1938 collapse of the Lake Sulphite Pulp Company's operation at Red Rock[10] led to Opposition charges of ineptness in the policies of the Department of Lands and Forests. Following hearings by a legislative committee in the matter, Heenan and his deputy minister tendered their resignations.[11] He was subsequently appointed as provincial Minister of Labour.

Heenan took good care of his constituents' interests, and arranged for many improvements for Northwestern Ontario, including the construction of the Heenan Highway (now Highway 71) to serve Kenora and Rainy River.[4]

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Striking Life Romance From Colliery Boy to Can. Cabinet. The Journal of Commerce. Montreal. July 28, 1928. October 10, 2013.
  2. News: Miner to Cabinet Minister, Hon. Peter Heenan, 72, Dies. Toronto Daily Star. May 13, 1948. 4.
  3. Michael S. Beaulieu. 2009. Reacting to the Worker's Revolt: The Lakehead and Winnipeg General Strike. Left History. 14. 1. 25. York University. October 10, 2013.
  4. News: Highway Officially Opened By Premier M.F. Hepburn Named 'Heenan Highway'. Fort Frances Times and Rainy Lake Herald. July 2, 1936.
  5. News: Hon. Peter Heenan To Don Overalls. Montreal Gazette. June 22, 1932. 11.
  6. News: Hon. Peter Heenan As Only Man Govt. Put Into Overalls. Ottawa Citizen. February 22, 1934. 3.
  7. The Forest Resources Regulation Act, 1936. S.O.. 1936. 22. https://archive.org/stream/statutesofprovin1936onta#page/96/mode/2up.
  8. Book: A. Ernest Epp. Ajith H. Perera. David L. Euler. Ian D. Thompson. Ecology of a Managed Terrestrial Landscape: Patterns and Processes of Forest Landscapes in Ontario. https://books.google.com/books?id=quGlpfIZfvMC&pg=PA253. 12: Ontario Forests and Forest Policy Before the Era of Sustainable Forestry. 2000. UBC Press. Vancouver. 0-7748-0749-0. 253–254.
  9. News: John G. Mock. Crown Lands Leased. Pittsburgh Press. April 9, 1941. 30.
  10. News: Lake Sulphite Co. Committee Named. Montreal Gazette. March 1, 1938.
  11. Book: R. Peter Gillis. Thomas R. Roach. Lost Initiatives: Canada's Forest Industries, Forest Policy, and Forest Conservation. registration. 1986. Greenwood Press. Westport, CT. 0-313-25415-X. 297.