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For more information on Sir Samuel Hughes, visit Britannica.com.
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| The Honourable Sir Samuel Hughes KCB PC |
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| In office 10 October 1911 – 12 October 1916 |
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| Prime Minister | Robert Laird Borden |
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| Preceded by | Frederick William Borden |
| Succeeded by | Albert Edward Kemp |
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Member of Parliament
for Victoria North and |
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| In office 11 February 1892 – 2 November 1904 |
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| Preceded by | John Augustus Barron |
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Member of Parliament
for Victoria |
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| In office 3 November 1904 – 24 August 1921 |
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| Preceded by | none |
| Succeeded by | John Jabez Thurston |
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| Born | January 8, 1853 Darlington, Canada West |
| Died | August 24, 1921 (aged 68) Lindsay, Ontario, Canada |
| Nationality | Canadian |
| Political party | Unionist |
| Other political affiliations |
Liberal-Conservative |
| Spouse(s) | Mary Burk |
| Alma mater | Toronto Normal School |
| Profession | Teacher, Editor |
| Religion | Methodist |
Sir Samuel Hughes, KCB, PC (January 8, 1853 – August 23, 1921) was the Canadian Minister of Militia and Defence during World War I. He was notable for being the last Liberal-Conservative cabinet minister, until he was dismissed from his cabinet post.
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Hughes was born January 8, 1853, at Solina near Bowmanville in what was then Canada West. He was educated in Durham County and later attended the Toronto Normal School and the University of Toronto. In 1866 he joined the 45th West Durham Battalion of Infantry and fought against the Fenian raids in the 1860s and 1870s. He was a teacher from 1875 to 1885, when he moved his family to Lindsay, where he had bought The Victoria Warder, the local newspaper. He was the paper's publisher from 1885 to 1897.
He was elected to Parliament in 1892, and fought in the Second Boer War in 1899 after helping to convince Sir Wilfrid Laurier to send Canadian troops. Hughes would continually campaign, unsuccessfully, to be awarded a Victoria Cross for actions that he had supposedly taken in the fighting. Hughes published most of his own accounts of the war. Hughes often said that when he left, the British commander was "sobbing like a child." In fact, Hughes was dismissed from Boer War service in the summer of 1900 for military indiscipline, and sent back to Canada.[1] Letters in which Hughes charged the British military with incompetence had been published in Canada and South Africa. Hughes had also flagrantly disobeyed orders in a key operation by granting favourable terms to an enemy force which surrendered to him. Although Hughes had proved a competent, and sometimes exceptional, front-line officer, boastfulness and impatience told strongly against him.[2]
Hughes was appointed Minister of Militia after the election of Robert Laird Borden in 1911, with the aim of creating a distinct Canadian army within the British Empire, to be used in case of war. He wrote a letter to the Governor General, Prince Arthur, Duke of Connaught, about his longtime demand for the Victoria Cross. Connaught privately recommended that Borden get rid of him.
He encouraged recruitment of volunteers when the First World War broke out in 1914, and he constructed a training camp in Valcartier, Quebec. He oversaw the training of the soldiers, and within three weeks they were ready to depart, Hughes delivering a lengthy, patriotic speech on horseback first. Hughes was an Orangeman prone to anti-Catholic sentiments, who was not well liked among French Canadians. Hughes increased tensions by sending Anglocentrics to recruit French Canadians, and by forcing French volunteers to speak English in training.
His historical reputation was sullied further by poor decisions on procurements for the force. Insisting on the utilization of Canadian manufactured equipment, Canadian Minister of Militia and Defence Sir Samuel Hughes presided over the deployment of equipment that was often inappropriate for the Western Front, or of dubious quality. Previous to 1917, this had negatively affected the operational performance of the Canadian Expeditionary Force.[3] The Ross rifle, MacAdam Shield Shovel, boots and webbing (developed for use in the South African War), and the Colt machine gun were all Canadian items which were eventually replaced or abandoned due to quality or severe functionality issues. The management of spending for supplies was eventually taken away from Hughes and assigned to the newly formed War Purchasing Commission in 1915.[4] It was not until Hughes' resignation in November 1916 that the Ross Rifle, which often jammed in trench warfare conditions, was fully abandoned in favour of the British standard Lee-Enfield rifle.
Canadian staff officers possessed an extremely limited level of experience and competence at the start of the war, having been discouraged from passing through the British Staff College for many years prior.[5] Compounding the issue was Sir Samuel Hughes' regular attempts to promote and appoint officers based upon patronage and Canadian nativism instead of ability, an act which not only created tension and jealousy between units but ultimately negatively affected the operating performance of the Canadian Expeditionary Force as well.[5]. Byng eventually became so incensed with the continuous interference on the part of Hughes that he threatened to resign. Criticism from Field Marshal Douglas Haig, King George V and from within his own party gradually forced Canadian Prime Minister Sir Robert Laird Borden to tighten control over Hughes.[6] However, it was not until Hughes' political isolation, with the creation of the Ministry of the Overseas Military Forces of Canada overseen by Albert Edward Kemp and subsequent forced resignation in November 1916, that the CEF was able to concentrate on the task of the spring offensive without persistent staffing interference.[7]
Hughes was knighted as a Knight Commander of the Order of the Bath, on August 24, 1915.
Sam Hughes died in August 1921 and was survived by his son, Garnet Hughes, who served in the First World War.
| Wikimedia Commons has media related to: Sam Hughes |
| 10th Ministry - Government of Robert Borden | ||
| Cabinet Posts (1) | ||
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| Predecessor | Office | Successor |
| Frederick William Borden | Minister of Militia and Defence 1911–1916 |
Albert Edward Kemp |
| Parliament of Canada | ||
| Preceded by John Augustus Barron |
Member of Parliament from Victoria North 1892—1904 |
Succeeded by district abolished in 1903 |
| Preceded by None |
Member of Parliament from Victoria 1904—1921 |
Succeeded by John Jabez Thurston |
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