The 7th Legislative Assembly of Ontario was in session from June 5, 1890 until May 29, 1894, just prior to the 1894 general election. The majority party was the Ontario Liberal Party led by Oliver Mowat.
Riding | Member | Party |
---|---|---|
Addington | James Reid | Conservative |
Algoma East | Alexander Franklin Campbell | Conservative |
Algoma West | James Conmee | Liberal |
Brant North | William Bruce Wood | Liberal |
Brant South | Arthur Sturgis Hardy | Liberal |
Brockville | Christopher Finlay Fraser | Conservative |
Bruce Centre | Walter MacMorris Dack | Liberal |
Bruce North | John George | Conservative |
David Porter (1891) | Liberal | |
Daniel McNaughton (1893) | Liberal | |
Bruce South | Hamilton Parke O'Connor | Liberal |
Cardwell | William Henry Hammell | Conservative |
Carleton | George William Monk | Conservative |
Dufferin | John Barr | Conservative Equal Rights |
Dundas | James Pliny Whitney | Conservative |
Durham East | George Campbell | Conservative Equal Rights |
Durham West | William Thomas Lockhart | Liberal |
Elgin East | Henry Thomas Godwin | Conservative |
Elgin West | Dugald McColl | Conservative |
Essex North | Solomon White | Conservative |
Essex South | William Douglas Balfour | Liberal |
Frontenac | Hugh Smith | Conservative |
Glengarry | James Rayside | Liberal |
Grenville | Orlando Bush | Conservative |
Grey Centre | Joseph Rorke | Conservative |
Grey North | James Cleland | Liberal |
Grey South | James Hill Hunter | Liberal |
Gilbert McKechnie (1891) | Liberal | |
Haldimand | Jacob Baxter | Liberal |
Halton | William Kerns | Conservative |
Hamilton | John Morison Gibson | Liberal |
Hastings East | William Parker Hudson | Conservative |
Hastings North | Alpheus Field Wood | Conservative |
Hastings West | William Hodgins Biggar | Liberal |
Huron East | Thomas Gibson | Liberal |
Huron South | Archibald Bishop | Liberal |
Huron West | James Thompson Garrow | Liberal |
Kent East | Robert Ferguson | Liberal |
Kent West | James Clancy | Conservative |
Kingston | James Henry Metcalfe | Conservative |
William Harty (1892) | Liberal | |
Lambton East | Hugh McKenzie | Liberal |
Peter Duncan McCallum (1893) | Independent Conservative | |
Lambton West | Charles MacKenzie | Liberal |
Lanark North | William Clyde Caldwell | Liberal |
Lanark South | Nathaniel McLenaghan | Conservative |
James Maitland Clarke (1894) | Liberal | |
Leeds | Robert Henry Preston | Conservative |
Lennox | Walter William Meacham | Conservative |
Lincoln | James Hiscott | Conservative |
London | William Ralph Meredith | Conservative |
Middlesex East | Richard Tooley | Conservative |
Middlesex North | John Waters | Liberal |
Middlesex West | George William Ross | Liberal |
Monck | Richard Harcourt | Liberal |
Muskoka | George Frederick Marter | Conservative |
Nipissing | John Loughrin | Liberal |
Norfolk North | John Bailey Freeman | Liberal |
Edwin Clarendon Carpenter (1891) | Liberal | |
Norfolk South | William Andrew Charlton | Liberal |
Northumberland East | William Arnson Willoughby | Conservative |
Northumberland West | Corelli Collard Field | Liberal |
Ontario North | James Glendinning | Conservative |
Ontario South | John Dryden | Liberal |
Ottawa | Erskine Henry Bronson | Liberal |
Oxford North | Oliver Mowat | Liberal |
Oxford South | Angus McKay | Liberal |
Parry Sound | James Sharpe | Liberal |
Peel | Kenneth Chisholm | Liberal |
John Smith (1893) | Liberal | |
Perth North | Alfred Emanuel Ahrens | Liberal |
Thomas Magwood (1891) | Conservative | |
Perth South | Thomas Ballantyne | Liberal |
Peterborough East | Thomas Blezard | Liberal |
Peterborough West | James Robert Stratton | Liberal |
Prescott | Francis Eugene Alfred Evanturel | Liberal |
Prince Edward | John Allison Sprague | Liberal |
Renfrew North | Arunah Dunlop | Conservative |
Henry Barr (1892) | Liberal | |
Renfrew South | John Francis Dowling | Liberal |
Russell | Alexander Robillard | Liberal |
Simcoe Centre | Robert Paton | Liberal |
Simcoe East | Andrew Miscampbell | Conservative |
Simcoe West | Thomas Wylie | Conservative |
Stormont | William Mack | Liberal |
Toronto | Edward Frederick Clarke | Conservative |
Toronto | Henry Edward Clarke | Conservative |
Nelson Gordon Bigelow (1892) | Liberal | |
George Sterling Ansel Ryerson (1893) | Conservative | |
Toronto | Joseph Tait | Liberal |
Victoria East | John Fell | Conservative |
Victoria West | John McKay | Liberal-Equal Rights |
Waterloo North | Elias Weber Bingeman Snider | Liberal |
Waterloo South | John Douglas Moore | Liberal |
Welland | William McCleary | Conservative |
Wellington East | Charles Clarke | Liberal |
James Kirkwood (1891) | Liberal | |
Wellington South | Donald Guthrie | Liberal |
Wellington West | Absalom Shade Allan | Liberal |
Wentworth North | James McMahon | Liberal |
Wentworth South | Nicholas Awrey | Liberal |
York East | George Byron Smith | Liberal |
York North | Elihu James Davis | Liberal |
York West | John Taylor Gilmour | Liberal |
Famous quotes containing the words legislative and/or assembly:
“Freedom of men under government is to have a standing rule to live by, common to every one of that society, and made by the legislative power vested in it; a liberty to follow my own will in all things, when the rule prescribes not, and not to be subject to the inconstant, unknown, arbitrary will of another man.”
—John Locke (16321704)
“There is a sacred horror about everything grand. It is easy to admire mediocrity and hills; but whatever is too lofty, a genius as well as a mountain, an assembly as well as a masterpiece, seen too near, is appalling.”
—Victor Hugo (18021885)