Fort William (provincial electoral district)
Ontario electoral district | |
---|---|
Defunct provincial electoral district | |
Legislature | Legislative Assembly of Ontario |
District created | 1908 |
District abolished | 1999 |
First contested | 1908 |
Last contested | 1999 |
Demographics | |
Census divisions | Thunder Bay District |
Census subdivisions | Fort William → Thunder Bay |
Fort William was a provincial electoral district in the Canadian province of Ontario, active from 1908 to 1999. The district was created out of the former Fort William and Lake of the Woods district for the 1908 election, serving the city of Fort William and the surrounding area.
When the city of Fort William merged with the neighbouring city of Port Arthur in 1970 to create the current city of Thunder Bay, the district of Fort William and the corresponding electoral district of Port Arthur continued as separate districts serving the new city.
For the 1999 provincial election, the government of Mike Harris redistributed provincial electoral districts to correspond to the same boundaries and names that were in use for the province's federal electoral districts. Fort William was merged at that time into the new district of Thunder Bay—Atikokan.
Members of the Legislative Assembly
Parliament | Years | Member | Party | |
---|---|---|---|---|
12th | 1908-1911 | Thomas Smellie | Conservative | |
13th | 1911-1914 | Charles William Jarvis | Conservative | |
14th | 1914-1919 | |||
15th | 1919-1923 | Harry Mills | Labour | |
16th | 1923-1926 | Franklin Harford Spence | Conservative | |
17th | 1926-1929 | |||
18th | 1929-1934 | |||
19th | 1934-1937 | Joseph Edmund Crawford | Liberal | |
20th | 1937-1943 | Franklin Harford Spence | Conservative | |
21st | 1943-1945 | Garfield Anderson | Cooperative Commonwealth Federation | |
22nd | 1945-1948 | |||
23rd | 1948-1951 | Charles Winnans Cox | Liberal | |
24th | 1951-1955 | Clare Mapledoram | Progressive Conservative | |
25th | 1955-1959 | |||
26th | 1959-1963 | John Boyle Chapple | Liberal | |
27th | 1963-1967 | Ted Freeman | New Democratic Party | |
28th | 1967-1971 | Jim Jessiman | Progressive Conservative | |
29th | 1971-1975 | |||
30th | 1975-1977 | Iain Angus | New Democratic Party | |
31st | 1977-1981 | Mickey Hennessy | Progressive Conservative | |
32nd | 1981-1985 | |||
33rd | 1985-1987 | |||
34th | 1987-1990 | Lyn McLeod | Liberal | |
35th | 1990-1995 | |||
36th | 1995-1999 |