Robert Abercrombie Pringle Explained

Robert Abercrombie Pringle
Smallimage:Robert Abercrombie Pringle.jpg
Constituency Mp1:Stormont
Parliament1:Canadian
Predecessor1:District was created in 1903
Successor1:Robert Smith
Term Start1:1904
Term End1:1908
Constituency Mp2:Cornwall and Stormont
Parliament2:Canadian
Predecessor2:John Goodall Snetsinger
Successor2:District was abolished in 1903
Term Start2:1900
Term End2:1904
Birth Date:15 December 1855
Birth Place:Cornwall, Canada West
Nationality:Canadian
Party:Liberal

Robert Abercrombie Pringle (December 15, 1855  - January 9, 1922) was a Canadian lawyer and politician.

Born in Cornwall, Canada West, the son of Jacob Farrand Pringle and Isabella Fraser, (daughter of Col. Alexander Fraser), Pringle was educated in public and high schools and Queen's University. A lawyer, he was treasurer of the town of Cornwall. A Conservative in politics, he served in the House of Commons from 1900 to 1908.

He was elected to the House of Commons of Canada for Cornwall and Stormont in the 1900 federal election. A Conservative, he was re-elected in the 1904 election but was defeated in 1908.

During the 1907 financial panic, Pringle wrote a criticism of the Canadian banking System. Another MP, banker Robert Bickerdike, took him to task, and put such pressure on him through negative articles in the media of the time that Pringle backed down. The next time the bank charters were renewed, instead of addressing the laxness of regulation that had led to the panic, several changes were made to suit the bankers.[1] (The later collapse of the Home Bank demonstrated the need for tightening of regulation of the banks.)

References

Specific
  1. R.C. Owens, Daylight on the Money and Banking Questions and other Problems (1922), p. 13-14