Richard Allen (Canadian politician) explained

Richard Allen
Office:Ontario MPP
Predecessor:Stuart Lyon Smith
Successor:Lillian Ross
Term Start:1982
Term End:1995
Constituency:Hamilton West
Party:New Democrat
Birth Date:10 February 1929
Birth Place:Vancouver, British Columbia
Death Place:Hamilton, Ontario
Residence:Dundas, Ontario
Spouse:Nettie Shewchuk
Children:2
Occupation:Historian

Richard Alexander Allen (February 10, 1929 – March 5, 2019)[1] was a historian and former politician in Ontario, Canada. He sat as a New Democratic Party member of the Legislative Assembly of Ontario from 1982 to 1995, and was a cabinet minister in the government of Bob Rae.

Background

Allen was born and raised in Vancouver, British Columbia. He has a Bachelor of Arts degree from the University of Toronto, a Master's Degree from the University of Saskatchewan and a Ph.D. from Duke University. He was a professor at the University of Regina from 1964 to 1974 where he initiated interdisciplinary prairie studies and founded the Canadian Plans Research Centre. He taught at McMaster University in Hamilton, Ontario as senior Canadian historian from 1974 to 1987. He and his wife Nettie have two children.[2]

Historian

Allen's career began with history and he specialized in Christian socialism within Canada. In 1971, he published a work entitled The Social Passion, chronicling the history of the Canadian social gospel from the 1890s to 1929. In the book he proposed that the social gospel supplied the reform movement with a type of ideology. He said it ultimately failed because the concept translated poorly between English and Canadian society and that the structure of the churches did not lend itself to promoting social change. The book was criticized because it focused too strongly on central Canada and ignored trends in the Maritimes and Western Canada.[3]

In addition to The Social Passion, Allen has published Region of the Mind: Interpreting the Western Canadian Plains (1973), Religion and society in the prairie west (1975) and Man and Nature on the Prairie (1976), and was the editor of a collection entitled The Social Gospel in Canada (1975). In 1998 he published a family history, "Sun Bright and Well Beloved: Three Hundred Years of a North American Family and their Farther Past," hailed in the Canadian Historical Review as setting a new standard for family history in Canada. He has also written several articles on Salem Bland, a prominent Canadian Christian socialist (1859–1950). In 2008 Allen published volume one of his biography of Salem Bland, The View from Murney Tower: Salem Bland, the Late Victorian Controversies, and the Search for a New Christianity.

List of works

Politics

Allen was elected to the Ontario legislature in a by-election held on June 17, 1982, defeating Liberal Joe Barbara and replacing former Liberal leader Stuart Smith as the Member of Provincial Parliament (MPP) for Hamilton West.[4] He was re-elected over Liberal Paul Hanover by 450 votes in the 1985 provincial election,[5] and defeated Liberal Mary Kiss by 1,096 votes in the provincial election of 1987.[6]

In 1983, Allen introduced a resolution calling for Ontario to be made a nuclear-free zone. It was defeated by a vote of 63 to 38.[7] As the NDP critic for Constitutional Affairs and a member of l'Association interparlementaire de langue francaise, Allen was a vocal supporter of the Meech Lake Accord, and with Liberal critic, Charles Beer, drafted the Ontario Legislature's official report on the Accord.[8]

In government

The NDP won the provincial election of 1990. Given his academic background, Allen was appointed Minister of Colleges and Universities and Minister of Skills Development on October 1, 1990.[2] He was also charged with creating an Ontario Training and Adjustment Board to establish a comprehensive training program in Ontario.[9]

In the cabinet shuffle of February 3, 1993, Allen was asked to become a Minister Without Portfolio in order to take responsibility for international trade.[10] On August 22, 1994, he was re-appointed to a full cabinet position as Minister of Housing.[11]

The NDP were defeated in the provincial election of 1995, and Allen lost the Hamilton West riding to Progressive Conservative Lillian Ross by over 4,000 votes.[12] Allen moved on to become chairperson of the Board of Wesley Urban Ministries in Hamilton (1996–2001) and resumed a career of historical research and writing.[13]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Richard Allen Obituary - Dundas, ON . Dignity Memorial . 27 March 2019 . en.
  2. News: Ontario's first NDP cabinet . Toronto Star . 2 October 1990 . A17.
  3. The Social Passion: Religion and Social Reform in Canada, 1914–18 . Faulkner . Tom . Church History . 41 . January 1, 1972 . 278. 10.2307/3164200 . 3164200 .
  4. News: NDP wins Hamilton by-election . Palango . Paul . The Globe and Mail . June 18, 1982 . P1.
  5. News: Results of vote in Ontario election . The Globe and Mail . May 3, 1985 . 13.
  6. News: Results from individual ridings . The Windsor Star . September 11, 1987 . F2.
  7. News: MPPs vote against nuclear resolution . Toronto Star . November 27, 1983 . F7.
  8. News: Stage set for Ontario to back pact . McMonagle . Duncan . The Globe and Mail . June 24, 1988 . A4.
  9. News: Agency's purpose to train workers . Derek . Ferguson . Bruce . DeMara . The Toronto Star . November 24, 1992 . A12.
  10. News: Cooke glad to shed old job: He gets new super education ministry . Richard . Brennan . The Windsor Star . February 3, 1993 . A1.
  11. News: Gigantes resigns as Housing Minister Standards backfiring, observers say . Mittelstaedt . Martin . The Globe and Mail . August 19, 1994 . A1.
  12. Web site: Summary of Valid Ballots by Candidate . Elections Ontario . June 8, 1995 . 2014-03-02 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20140503003649/http://results.elections.on.ca/results/1995_results/valid_votes.jsp?e_code=36&rec=0&district=hamilton+west&flag=E&layout=G . May 3, 2014 .
  13. News: Beasley residents vow to fight Wesley Centre's rezoning bid . Nolan . Mary K . The Spectator . Hamilton, Ont . October 4, 1996 . A9.