Royal Maitland Explained

Honorific-Prefix:The Honourable
Royal Maitland
Office:Attorney General of British Columbia
Term Start:December 10, 1941
Term End:March 28, 1946
Predecessor:Duff Pattullo
Successor:Gordon Sylvester Wismer
Office2:Member of the Legislative Assembly of British Columbia for Vancouver City
Termstart2:1928
Termend2:1933
Office3:Member of the Legislative Assembly of British Columbia for Vancouver-Point Grey
Termstart3:1937
Termend3:1946
Office4:15th President of the Canadian Bar Association
Predecessor4:Gordon Harold Aikins
Successor4:François-Philippe Brais
Term Start4:1943
Term End4:1944
Birth Name:Royal Lethington Maitland
Birth Date:9 January 1889
Birth Place:Ingersoll, Ontario, Canada
Death Place:Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
Party:British Columbia Conservative Party
Profession:Lawyer

Royal Lethington "Pat" Maitland (January 9, 1889  - March 28, 1946) was a Canadian lawyer and politician.[1] He served as Attorney General of British Columbia in the Hart ministry. He also served as national president of the Canadian Bar Association.

Legal career

Maitland was a prominent criminal lawyer and law professor, and was active in the Canadian Bar Association. He spent part of his career (1915 to 1919) as a city prosecutor in Vancouver. He served as President of the Association from 1943 to 1944, while he was Attorney General.[2]

Political career

After being an unsuccessful candidate in the 1924 provincial election, Maitland was first elected to the British Columbia Legislature as the Conservative MLA for Vancouver City in the 1928 general election. Between 1928 and 1933, he served in the cabinet as Minister without Portfolio. By the time of the 1933 provincial election, the Conservative government of Premier Simon Fraser Tolmie had collapsed into rival factions. Maitland did not stand for re-election.

Maitland returned to office in the 1937 general election from the riding of Vancouver-Point Grey. The next year, upon the death of Frank Porter Patterson, the leader of the Conservative Party, Maitland became party leader and Leader of the Opposition. His challenge was to rebuild the moribund British Columbia Conservative Party, which had split into two and collapsed in 1933 under Tolmie's leadership.

In the 1941 provincial election, Maitland led the Conservatives to a strong finish with 30.91 per cent of the vote and 12 seats, though with the CCF doubling its seats the party was consigned to third place. The Liberal government of Thomas Dufferin Pattullo was reduced to a minority government and though it won the greatest number of seats actually received fewer votes than the CCF. The Liberal Party pressured Pattullo to form a coalition government with the Conservatives in order to forestall the government's collapse and a possible CCF victory.

Pattullo refused and was replaced as Liberal leader and Premier by John Hart who was willing to form a coalition. Maitland's Conservatives joined the government, obtaining three seats in Cabinet to the Liberals' five. Maitland became Attorney General in the Hart ministry.[3]

Four years later, in the 1945 provincial election, Maitland's Conservatives contested the election jointly with the Liberals and were re-elected.

Death

Maitland died from influenza at Vancouver General Hospital on March 28, 1946, the year after his successful participation in the 1945 general election.[4]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: The Canadian Parliamentary Guide. 1939.
  2. http://www.cba.org/cba/info/main/PrintHtml.aspx?DocId=13167 Canadian Bar Association: Past CBA Presidents
  3. http://www.memorybc.ca/maitland-royal-lethington Memory BC: Royal Lethington Maitland fonds.
  4. News: Influenza Causes Death of Attorney-General . . 1 . 1946-03-28 . 2020-07-14 . Newspapers.com.