The city of Ottawa, Canada held municipal elections on January 6, 1919 to elect members of the 1919 Ottawa City Council.
The election saw a woman elected in the city for the first time, with Marion McDougall (wife of the late John Lorn McDougall)[1] being elected as a public school trustee in Dalhousie Ward.
Mayor of Ottawa
Fisher won seven of the city's nine wards, while Parent won the city's two francophone wards, By and Ottawa.
Candidate | Votes | % |
---|---|---|
Harold Fisher | 7,624 | 62.16 |
Rufus H. Parent | 4,642 | 37.84 |
Plebiscites
Ottawa Electric Railway to be taken over and run by a commission before 1923. | ||
---|---|---|
Option | Votes | % |
Yes | 8,234 | 75.31 |
No | 2,700 | 24.69 |
Ottawa Electric Railway to be taken over and run by a commission in 1923. | ||
---|---|---|
Option | Votes | % |
Yes | 8,771 | 79.12 |
No | 2,314 | 20.88 |
Ottawa Electric Railway to be taken over and run by a commission. | ||
---|---|---|
Option | Votes | % |
Yes | 8,943 | 81.65 |
No | 2,010 | 18.35 |
By-law to provide for an expenditure of $150,000 on a bridge of the Rideau Canal at Somerset Street | ||
---|---|---|
Option | Votes | % |
Yes | 2,658 | 50.08 |
No | 2,649 | 49.92 |
The plebiscite lost in all but three wards, but won St. George Ward (which the bridge would connect with Downtown) by a large enough margin to pass city-wide by just nine votes.[2] Despite the result, a bridge would not be built at that location until the Corktown Footbridge was built in 2006.
By-law to secure authority to expend $150,000 on the establishment and maintenance of a civic coal yard | ||
---|---|---|
Option | Votes | % |
Against | 3,161 | 59.73 |
For | 2,163 | 40.63 |
Ottawa Board of Control
(4 elected)
Candidate | Votes | % |
---|---|---|
Frank H. Plant | 6,666 | 18.54 |
Joseph Kent | 6,501 | 18.08 |
Napoléon Champagne | 6,206 | 17.26 |
J. W. Nelson | 5,298 | 14.74 |
James Muir | 5,229 | 14.55 |
Thomas Brethour | 4,985 | 13.87 |
Peter Glavey | 1,062 | 2.95 |
Ottawa City Council
(2 elected from each ward)
Rideau Ward | ||
---|---|---|
Candidate | Votes | % |
Douglas H. Macdonald | 352 | 33.78 |
Breary Slinn | 285 | 27.35 |
William Cherry | 206 | 19.77 |
Daudelin | 199 | 19.10 |
By Ward | ||
---|---|---|
Candidate | Votes | % |
Edward Gaulin | 652 | 37.86 |
Fred Desjardins | 613 | 35.60 |
Labelle | 457 | 26.54 |
St. George Ward | ||
---|---|---|
Candidate | Votes | % |
Walter Cunningham | ||
Wilfrid J. Grace |
Wellington Ward | ||
---|---|---|
Candidate | Votes | % |
James D. Denny | ||
Charles R. Stephen |
Capital Ward | ||
---|---|---|
Candidate | Votes | % |
Arthur R. Ford | 1,417 | 35.35 |
William Y. Denison | 1,094 | 27.30 |
McCormick | 848 | 21.16 |
Walsh | 649 | 16.19 |
Dalhousie Ward | ||
---|---|---|
Candidate | Votes | % |
John P. Balharrie | 1,181 | 31.82 |
James A. Forward | 944 | 25.44 |
O'Meara | 671 | 18.08 |
Pelletier | 572 | 15.41 |
Hunt | 343 | 9.24 |
Victoria Ward | ||
---|---|---|
Candidate | Votes | % |
Ernest Laroche | Acclaimed | |
David Rice | Acclaimed |
Ottawa Ward | ||
---|---|---|
Candidate | Votes | % |
Joseph Albert Pinard | 850 | 36.39 |
Waldo Guertin | 633 | 27.10 |
Bordeleau | 476 | 20.38 |
Beauregard | 377 | 16.14 |
Central Ward | ||
---|---|---|
Candidate | Votes | % |
John F. McKinley | Acclaimed | |
Charles Pepper | Acclaimed |
References
- ↑ "Life of service closes in the sudden passing today of Mrs. J. L. McDougall Sr". Ottawa Citizen. August 18, 1927. p. 1. Retrieved May 9, 2020.
- ↑ "Citizens favor (sic) taking over of street railway". Ottawa Citizen. January 7, 1919. p. 5. Retrieved May 9, 2020.
- ↑ "Fisher, Plant, Kent, Champagne, and Nelson are Elected". Ottawa Journal. January 7, 1919. p. 8. Retrieved May 9, 2020.
- ↑ "Denison, McKinley, Guertin, Slinn, New Aldermen Elected". Ottawa Journal. January 7, 1919. p. 9. Retrieved May 9, 2020.
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