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St. Henri (electoral district)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

St. Henri
Quebec electoral district
Defunct federal electoral district
LegislatureHouse of Commons
District created1924
District abolished1987
First contested1925
Last contested1984
Counting the ballots in the 1938 by-election in the riding of St. Henri; Camillien Houde, running for the Conservatives, lost to Joseph Arsène Bonnier for the Liberals.

St. Henri (also known as St. Henry, St-Henri, Saint-Henri and Saint-Jacques) was a federal electoral district in Quebec, Canada, that was represented in the House of Commons of Canada from 1925 to 1988.

This riding was created in 1924 as "St. Henri" riding from parts of Westmount—St. Henri. In 1933, its English name was changed to "St. Henry". In 1947, "St. Henry" was abolished when it was redistributed into "St-Henri" and St. Antoine—Westmount ridings.

In 1952, "St-Henri" was abolished, and its territory transferred into a new riding named "Saint-Henri". In 1977, it was renamed Saint-Jacques.

Following the 2003 redistribution, the area of the old St-Henri riding is now part of the riding of Jeanne-Le Ber.

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Transcription

Canada and the United States share the longest, straightest, possibly boringest border in the world. But, look closer, and there's plenty of bizarreness to be found. While these sister nations get along fairly well, they both want to make it really clear whose side of the continent is whose. And they've done this by carving a 20-foot wide space along the border. All five and a half thousand miles of it. With the exception of the rare New England town that predates national borders or the odd airport that needed extending, this space is the no-touching-zone between the countries and they're super serious about keeping it clear. It matters not if the no-touching-zone runs through hundreds of miles of virtually uninhabited Alaskan / Yukon wilderness. Those border trees, will not stand. Which might make you think this must be the longest, straightest deforested place in the world, but it isn't. Deforested: yes, but straight? Not at all. Sure it looks straight and on a map, and the treaties establishing the line *say* it's straight... but in the real world the official border is 900 lines that zig-zags from the horizontal by as much as several hundred feet. How did this happen? Well, imagine you're back in North America in the 1800s -- The 49th parallel (one of those horizontal lines you see on a globe) has just been set as the national boundary and it's your job to make it real. You're handed a compass and a ball of string and told to carefully mark off the next 2/3rds of a continent. Don't mind that uncharted wilderness in the way: just keep the line straight. Yeah. Good luck. With that. The men who surveyed the land did the best they could and built over 900 monuments. They're in about as straight as you could expect a pre-GPS civilization to make, but it's not the kind of spherical / planar intersection that would bring a mathematician joy. Nonetheless these monuments define the border and the no-touching-zone plays connect-the-dots with them. Oh, and while there are about 900 markers along this section of the border, there are about 8,000 in total that define the shape of the nations. Despite this massive project Canada and the United States still have disputed territory. There is a series of islands in the Atlantic that the United States claims are part of Maine and Canada claims are part of New Brunswick. Canada, assuming the islands are hers built a lighthouse on one of them, and the United States, assuming the islands are hers pretends the lighthouse doesn't exist. It's not a huge problem as the argument is mostly over tourists who want to see puffins and fishermen who want to catch lobsters, but let's hope the disagreement gets resolved before someone finds oil under that lighthouse. Even the non-disputed territory has a few notably weird spots: such as this tick of the border upward into Canada. Zoom in and it gets stranger as the border isn't over solid land but runs through a lake to cut off a bit of Canada before diving back down to the US. This spot is home to about 100 Americans and is a perfect example of how border irregularities are born: Back in 1783 when the victorious Americans were negotiating with the British who controlled what would one day be Canada, they needed a map, and this map was the best available at the time. While the East Coast looks pretty good, the wester it goes the sparser it gets. Under negotiation was the edge of what would one day be Minnesota and Manitoba. But unfortunately, that area was hidden underneath an inset on the map, so the Americans and British were bordering blind. Seriously. They guessed that the border should start from the northwestern part of this lake and go in a horizontal line until it crossed the Mississippi... somewhere. But somewhere, turned out to be nowhere as the mighty Mississippi stops short of that line, which left the border vague until 35 years later when a second round of negotiations established the aforementioned 49th parallel. But there was still a problem as the lake mentioned earlier was both higher, and less circular than first though, putting its northwesterly point here so the existing border had to jump up to meet it and then drop straight down to the 49th, awkwardly cutting off a bit of Canada, before heading west across the remainder of the continent. Turns out you just can't draw a straight(-ish) line for hundreds of miles without causing a few more problems. One of which was luckily spotted in advance: Vancouver Island, which the 49th would have sliced through, but both sides agreed that would be dumb so the border swoops around the island. However, next door to Vancouver Island is Point Roberts which went unnoticed as so today the border blithey cuts across. It's a nice little town, home to over 1,000 Americans, but has only a primary school so its older kids have to cross international borders four times a day to go to school in their own state. In a pleasing symetry, the East cost has the exact opposite situation with a Canadian Island whose only land route is a bridge to the United States. And these two aren't the only places where each country contains a bit of the other: there are several more, easily spotted in sattelite photos by the no-touching zone. Regardless of if the land in question is just an uninhabited strip, in the middle of a lake, in the middle of nowhere, the border between these sister nations must remain clearly marked.

Members of Parliament

This riding elected the following members of Parliament:

Parliament Years Member Party
St. Henri
Riding created from Westmount—St. Henri
15th  1925–1926     Paul Mercier Liberal
16th  1926–1930
17th  1930–1935
St. Henry
18th  1935–1937     Paul Mercier Liberal
 1938–1940 Joseph-Arsène Bonnier
19th  1940–1945
20th  1945–1949
St-Henri
21st  1949–1953     Joseph-Arsène Bonnier Liberal
Saint-Henri
22nd  1953–1957     Joseph-Arsène Bonnier Liberal
23rd  1957–1958
24th  1958–1962 Hilarion-Pit Lessard
25th  1962–1963
26th  1963–1965
27th  1965–1968
28th  1968–1972 Gérard Loiselle
29th  1972–1974
30th  1974–1979
Saint-Jacques
31st  1979–1980     Jacques Guilbault Liberal
32nd  1980–1984
33rd  1984–1988
Riding dissolved into Laurier—Sainte-Marie,
Saint-Henri—Westmount and Verdun—Saint-Paul

Election results

St. Henri, 1925–1935

1925 Canadian federal election
Party Candidate Votes
Liberal Paul Mercier 11,829
Liberal Protectionist Léopold Doyon 2,839
1926 Canadian federal election
Party Candidate Votes
Liberal Paul Mercier 9,995
Independent Liberal Joseph Mongeau 2,152
1930 Canadian federal election
Party Candidate Votes
Liberal Paul Mercier 11,520
Conservative Auguste Boyer 5,917

St. Henry, 1935–1949

1935 Canadian federal election
Party Candidate Votes
Liberal Paul Mercier 21,561
Conservative Damase Saint-Maurice 4,871
Reconstruction Amédée Jasmin 2,885
By-election on 17 January 1938

On Mercier's acceptance of an office of emolument
under the Crown, 30 November 1937

Party Candidate Votes
Liberal Joseph Arsène Bonnier 16,594
Conservative Camillien Houde 11,931
Independent Liberal Onil Léonide Gingras 346
1940 Canadian federal election
Party Candidate Votes
Liberal Joseph Arsène Bonnier 17,531
Independent Liberal Wilfrid-Eldège Lauriault 10,371
National Government Édouard Lamontagne 2,081
  Anti-Conscriptionist Louis-Gérard Gosselin 642
1945 Canadian federal election
Party Candidate Votes
Liberal Joseph Arsène Bonnier 19,137
Bloc populaire Marcel Lafaille 8,601
Progressive Conservative Édouard Lamontagne 1,902
Co-operative Commonwealth René Chabot 941
Independent Georges Taillefer 377
Social Credit Paul-Elzéar Légaré 334
Independent Conrad Bourdeau 322

St-Henri, 1949–1953

1949 Canadian federal election
Party Candidate Votes
Liberal Joseph Arsène Bonnier 16,313
Progressive Conservative Germain Angrignon 7,369
Co-operative Commonwealth Paul-Émile Jutras 909
Union des électeurs Ferdinand Bouffard 500

Saint-Henri, 1953–1979

1953 Canadian federal election
Party Candidate Votes
Liberal Joseph Arsène Bonnier 15,046
Progressive Conservative Germain Angrignon 4,659
Independent Liberal Jacques Leblanc 2,992
Co-operative Commonwealth Paul-Émile Jutras 538
Labor–Progressive Pierre Gélinas 419
1957 Canadian federal election
Party Candidate Votes
Liberal Joseph Arsène Bonnier 12,489
Independent Liberal Rosaire Bouchard 9,207
Progressive Conservative Maurice Boudrias 2,766
Co-operative Commonwealth Paul-Émile Jutras 963
1958 Canadian federal election
Party Candidate Votes
Liberal Hilarion-Pit Lessard 11,533
Progressive Conservative Germain Angrignon 10,196
Independent Liberal Rosaire Bouchard 4,393
Independent Liberal Eugène-J.-E. Fournier 1,825
Social Credit Lucien Bougie 714
Co-operative Commonwealth Paul-Émile Jutras 691
1962 Canadian federal election
Party Candidate Votes
Liberal Hilarion-Pit Lessard 13,323
Progressive Conservative J.-Hormisdas Delisle 9,013
New Democratic Armand Arsenault 2,200
Social Credit Édouard Provencher 1,188
Independent Ernest-Bill Boucher 646
1963 Canadian federal election
Party Candidate Votes
Liberal Hilarion-Pit Lessard 13,981
Social Credit Bruno Lépine 8,003
Progressive Conservative Philippe Joannisse 2,800
New Democratic Maurice Hébert 2,378
1965 Canadian federal election
Party Candidate Votes
Liberal Hilarion-Pit Lessard 12,310
Progressive Conservative Paul Barré 6,297
New Democratic Richard Desjardins 3,364
Ralliement créditiste Eugène Lépine 2,039
Communist Jeannette Walsh 228
1968 Canadian federal election
Party Candidate Votes
Liberal Gérard Loiselle 12,792
Independent Pierre Sévigny 3,499
New Democratic Gérard Philipps 1,491
Progressive Conservative Pierre Hogue 972
Ralliement créditiste Joseph Ranger 608
Independent Liberal William Gaudreau 465
Independent Lomer Pilote 335
1972 Canadian federal election
Party Candidate Votes
Liberal Gérard Loiselle 7,191
Independent Frank Hanley 5,743
Progressive Conservative Eugène Fournier 2,802
Social Credit Wilbrod Trépanier 2,082
New Democratic Michel Gingras 1,161
Independent Francine Bérubé 126
1974 Canadian federal election
Party Candidate Votes
Liberal Gérard Loiselle 8,813
Progressive Conservative Lucien Jarraud 6,147
New Democratic Gus Callaghan 922
Social Credit Jean-Paul Poulin 633
Independent Louis Grégoire 306
Marxist–Leninist Robert Perrault 119

Saint-Jacques, 1979–1988

1979 Canadian federal election
Party Candidate Votes
Liberal Jacques Guilbault 20,520
Progressive Conservative Jean Chevrier 3,704
New Democratic David-André Rowley 1,978
Social Credit J. Alfred Lévesque 1,715
Rhinoceros Balthazar Michel Deschamps 933
Libertarian Robert Champlin 295
Communist Claire Durand 189
Independent Patricia Métivier 143
Marxist–Leninist Auguste Arnold 104
Union populaire Serge Rainville 84
1980 Canadian federal election
Party Candidate Votes
Liberal Jacques Guilbault 17,757
Progressive Conservative Jean Chevrier 3,038
New Democratic Roger Monette 2,339
Rhinoceros Rodrigue Tremblay 1,080
Independent Raymonde Lebreux 224
Libertarian Marc Krushelnyski 137
Union populaire Hughette Godard 120
Marxist–Leninist Arnold August 96
Communist Daniel Pauquet 88
Independent Patricia Métivier 55
1984 Canadian federal election
Party Candidate Votes
Liberal Jacques Guilbault 10,875
Progressive Conservative Lorraine Duguay 10,291
New Democratic Mike Molter 4,057
Rhinoceros Pierre Corbeil 1,204
Parti nationaliste Denise Laroche 738
Communist Marianne Roy 152
Commonwealth of Canada Robert Langevin 116

See also

External links

Riding history from the Library of Parliament:

This page was last edited on 13 February 2024, at 20:51
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