Results for William Lyon Mackenzie King
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Political Biography:

Mackenzie King

(b. Berlin (Kitchener), Ontario, 17 Dec. 1874; d. Ottawa, 22 July 1950) Canadian; Prime Minister 1921 – 6, 1926 – 30, 1935 – 48 King remains Canada's longest-serving Prime Minister and a giant in the country's political history. He spent some time in the Canadian civil service after university. In 1908 he was elected as Liberal MP. By 1909 he was Minister of Labour, serving under Wilfrid Laurier. After some time out of politics and working at the Rockefeller Foundation, he was returned again as an MP and, on Laurier's death, was made party leader in 1919. His absence from Parliament, at a time when the party was so divided on conscription during the First World War, was a political advantage for him.

Between 1921 and 1926 King was Prime Minister and Minister for External Affairs. His party's majority in parliament had disappeared in the 1925 election and he relied upon the support of the Progressives to carry legislation. He was then involved in the famous King-Byng affair. This arose when his government faced a motion of censure in 1926 which it was sure to lose and his request to Governor General Byng for a dissolution was refused. The main opposition party, the Conservatives, were then given the opportunity to form a government which lasted a short time until it lost a key vote, and Byng agreed to the Conservative request for a dissolution. In the election, King's Liberals gained a clear majority. His party lost the 1929 election — which meant that it escaped some of the responsibility and unpopularity for tackling the economic depression — but returned in 1935. King was influential in shaping the Statute of Westminster (1931), which paved the way to a greater self-government for the dominions in the British Empire. In the late 1930s he supported the appeasement of Mussolini and Hitler, until it was clear that war was inevitable.

The question of whether Canada should introduce conscription during wartime was again divisive, as it had been in the First World War. King was originally opposed, not least because of opposition in Quebec, but he gradually coaxed his colleagues and the country to support it. In 1940 his government had introduced conscription for the defence of Canada and a plebiscite in 1942 supported its extension. In 1944 it was finally agreed that Canada would send troops abroad, as opposed to relying on volunteers. The fact that it was near the end of the war prevented the issue from being as divisive as in the past. King's lengthy tenure as Prime Minister is a tribute to his political skills as well as a reflection of the Liberal Party's dominance in Canada. He retired from the premiership in 1948, having been in post since 1935.

 
 
Biography: William Lyon Mackenzie King

William Lyon Mackenzie King (1874-1950) was prime minister of Canada for more than 21 years, a longer period in office than any other first minister in the history of countries in the British Commonwealth.

On Dec. 17, 1874, W. L. Mackenzie King was born at Berlin (later Kitchener), Ontario. His father, John King, was a lawyer, and his mother, Isabel Mackenzie King, was the daughter of William Lyon Mackenzie, leader of the short-lived rebellion of 1837 in Upper Canada. His maternal spiritual inheritance was of some significance to King and may help to explain his lifelong ambivalence between his urge to be a reformer and his craving for social respectability.

King graduated from the University of Toronto in 1895, undertook postgraduate studies at Chicago, and secured a doctorate in political economy from Harvard. In Chicago he was associated with Jane Addams's work at Hull House, an experience which strengthened his interest in social reform.

Entry into Government Service

In 1900 King joined the Canadian civil service as deputy minister of labor, and in 1908, when he entered politics and won the riding of Waterloo North for the Liberals, the prime minister, Sir Wilfrid Laurier, appointed him Canada's first full-time minister of labor. In the prewar years he achieved considerable prominence in Canada as a labor conciliator and was chiefly responsible for drafting and presenting to Parliament the Industrial Disputes Investigation Act (1907) and the Combines Investigation Act (1910). These measures revealed King's tenaciously held faith that exposure of the facts of any situation to public scrutiny would create a public opinion strong enough to ensure the resolution of social problems.

During World War I King worked for the Rockefeller Foundation on labor research and served as an industrial counselor to the Rockefeller interests. His views on industrial relations were expounded vaguely and verbosely in Industry and Humanity (1918).

Party Leader and Prime Minister

Following Laurier's death a Liberal party convention in 1919 chose King as party leader, and he reentered the House of Commons as leader of the opposition. He became prime minister in 1921 as the result of an election which brought an end to the two-party system in federal politics. A large part of his support then and later lay in a solid block of conservative French-Canadian members of Parliament. While keeping their allegiance he endeavored to woo the 65 members of the second largest group in Parliament, the agrarian Progressive party, whom King described as "Liberals in a hurry," temporarily adrift from their true political home. By 1924 most of the Progressives had returned to the Liberal fold, thanks mainly to King's judicious concessions in the direction of a lower tariff.

By adroit maneuvering rather than through any correct constitutional interpretation, King survived the "King-Byng constitutional crisis" of 1926 and held office again after a few weeks in opposition until he was defeated in 1930, an event he later perceived as good fortune since it labeled the victorious Conservatives for years to come as the "party of depression."

On his return to power in 1935, where he was to remain until his retirement in 1948, King found a new force on the political scene in the Co-operative Commonwealth Federation (CCF). He was not unwilling to use the existence of the new socialist group to strengthen reform elements within his own party. By the end of World War II he was genuinely alarmed by the apparently growing threat presented by the CCF, and this awareness did much to push through a program of postwar reconstruction measures, including the extension of social insurance and the establishment of family allowances.

Foreign Relations

In external relations King was a steady proponent of Canadian autonomy, and during his years in office complete sovereignty within the British Commonwealth was achieved. He exercised this sovereignty with great caution, pursuing a policy of "no commitments" in the League of Nations and toward collective security generally. As the threat of war increased in the 1930s, King consistently refused to declare Canadian policy beyond the assertion that "Parliament will decide." In 1939 Canada followed Britain into a war that saw Canada's contribution grow until it was for a time the second largest force after Britain, militarily and industrially, on the Allied side of the struggle.

Under King's leadership Canada moved into a new era of closer relations with the United States, notably during World War II, when the Ogdensburg Agreement of 1940, establishing the Permanent Joint Board on Defence, was followed by the Hyde Park Agreement of 1941, to promote cooperation between the two countries in defense production.

King's enormous skill as a politician was never better demonstrated than during the war, when he managed to prevent the conscription question from tearing the nation apart as it had in 1917. It was perhaps his greatest achievement that he brought French and English Canadians through the war in relative harmony. Indeed, the most consistent theme in King's political philosophy and practice was his commitment to Canadian unity, and increasingly he saw the unity of the Liberal party as synonymous with national unity.

King had no personal magnetism, he was no orator, and he aroused little affection even in his warmest supporters. His political longevity was due to his acute political sense and, sometimes, to his ruthlessness. He never married, and in his loneliness he confided his perpetual self-doubt and his ambitions to his voluminous diaries. He died 2 years after his retirement at Kingsmere, his country home near Ottawa, on July 22, 1950.

Further Reading

Two excellent volumes of the official biography of King have been published: Robert R. MacGregor Dawson, William Lyon Mackenzie King: A Political Biography, 1874-1923 (1958), and H. Blair Neatby, William Lyon Mackenzie King: The Lonely Heights, 1924-1932 (1963). Bruce Hutchinson, The Incredible Canadian (1952), is a popular biography by a good journalist. J. W. Pickersgill and Donald F. Forster, eds., The Mackenzie King Record (4 vols., 1960-1969), portrays the years 1939-1948 largely in the words of King's diaries. Fred A. McGregor, The Fall and Rise of Mackenzie King, 1911-1919 (1962), recounts in detail King's work as a labor conciliator and his rise to party leadership. Henry Stanley Ferns and Bernard Ostry, The Age of Mackenzie King: The Rise of the Leader (1955), gives a less flattering account of roughly the same years.

Additional Sources

Ferns, H. S. (Henry Stanley), The age of Mackenzie King, Toronto: J. Lorimer, 1976.

Granatstein, J. L., Mackenzie King: his life and world, Toronto; New York: McGraw-Hill Ryerson, 1977.

Mackenzie King: widening the debate, Toronto: Macmillan of Canada, 1977.

Stacey, C. P. (Charles Perry), Mackenzie King and the Atlantic triangle, Toronto: Macmillan of Canada, 1976.

Teatero, William, Mackenzie King: man of mission, Don Mills, Ont.: T. Nelson & Sons (Canada), 1979.

 
Britannica Concise Encyclopedia: William Lyon Mackenzie King

W.L. Mackenzie King.
(click to enlarge)
W.L. Mackenzie King. (credit: National Film Board of Canada Phototheque)
(born Dec. 17, 1874, Berlin, Ont., Can. — died July 22, 1950, Kingsmere, Que.) Prime minister of Canada (1921 – 26, 1926 – 30, 1935 – 48). The grandson of William L. Mackenzie, he was deputy minister of labour (1900 – 08) before being appointed Canada's first minister of labour (1909 – 11). Reelected to the Canadian Parliament (1919), he became leader of the Liberal Party. As prime minister, he favoured social reform without socialism; he led the government with support from an alliance of Liberals and Progressives. He effected a more independent relationship between the Commonwealth nations and Britain. During and after World War II he unified a country often divided between English and French constituents.

For more information on William Lyon Mackenzie King, visit Britannica.com.

 
Columbia Encyclopedia: King, William Lyon Mackenzie,
1874–1950, Canadian political leader, b. Kitchener, Ont.; grandson of William Lyon Mackenzie. An expert on labor questions, he served in Wilfrid Laurier's Liberal administration as deputy minister of labor (1900–1908) and minister of labor (1909–11) and was editor (1900–1908) of the Labour Gazette. He first served in the House of Commons from 1909 to 1911, and during World War I he was engaged (1914–17) in investigating industrial relations in the United States. Chosen in 1919 to succeed Laurier as leader of the Liberal party, Mackenzie King led the opposition in Parliament until 1921, when he became prime minister, a post he filled, except for a brief interval in 1926, until 1930. Leader of the opposition during Richard Bedford Bennett's government (1930–35), he afterward again served (1935–48) as prime minister. Called upon to guide Canadian affairs during World War II, King enunciated his position in Canada at Britain's Side (1941) and Canada and the Fight for Freedom (1944). In 1940 he concluded with President Franklin Delano Roosevelt the Ogdensburg Agreement and in 1941, the Hyde Park Declaration; by these Canada and the United States agreed to create a permanent joint board of defense and to cooperate in the production of defense materials. King served as chairman of the Canadian delegation at the conference (1945) in San Francisco to draft the Charter of the United Nations and at the Paris Conference of 1946. With President Harry Truman and Prime Minister Clement Attlee of Great Britain, he signed in 1945 the Washington declaration on atomic energy.

Bibliography

See biography by R. M. Dawson (Vol. I, 1958) and H. B. Neatby (Vol. II, 1963); J. W. Pickersgill and D. F. Forster, The Mackenzie King Record (4 vol., 1960–70); J. E. Esberey, Knight of the Holy Spirit: A Study of William Lyon Mackenzie King (1980).

 
Quotes By: Mackenzie King

Quotes:

"The promise of yesterday are the taxes of today."

 
Wikipedia: William Lyon Mackenzie King


The Right Honourable
William Lyon Mackenzie King
William Lyon Mackenzie King

In office
December 29, 1921 – June 28, 1926
September 25, 1926August 6, 1930
October 23, 1935November 15, 1948
Preceded by Arthur Meighen (twice)
Richard Bedford Bennett
Succeeded by Arthur Meighen
Richard Bedford Bennett
Louis St-Laurent

Born December 17 1874(1874--)
Berlin, Ontario
Died July 22 1950 (aged 75)
Wright County, Quebec
Political party Liberal Party of Canada
Religion Presbyterian (occult)

William Lyon Mackenzie King, PC, OM, CMG (December 17, 1874July 22, 1950) was the tenth Prime Minister of Canada from December 29, 1921, to June 28, 1926; September 25, 1926, to August 6, 1930; and October 23, 1935, to November 15, 1948. With over 21 years in the office, he was the longest serving Prime Minister in British Commonwealth history. He is commonly known either by his full name or as Mackenzie King. Mackenzie was one of his given names, not part of his surname, but he was never publicly referred to as simply "William King." Friends and family called him by his nickname, "Rex."

Biography

Early life

King was born in Berlin, Ontario (now Kitchener) to John King and Isabel Grace Mackenzie. His grandfather was William Lyon Mackenzie, first mayor of Toronto and leader of the Upper Canada Rebellion in 1837. King had three siblings: older sister Isabel "Bella" Christina Grace (1873–1915), younger sister Janet "Jennie" Lindsey (1876–1962), and younger brother Dougall Macdougall "Max" (1878–1922)[1].

King attended Berlin Central School (now Suddaby Public School) and Berlin High School (now Kitchener-Waterloo Collegiate and Vocational School) and held five university degrees. He obtained three from the University of Toronto: B.A. 1895, LL.B. 1896, and M.A. 1897. While attending the University of Toronto he met nine of his cabinet ministers during his time as prime minister, all of whom, including him, were members of the Kappa Alpha Society.[2] After studying at the University of Chicago, Mackenzie King proceeded to Harvard University, receiving an M.A. in political economy 1898 and a Ph.D. 1909. He is the only Canadian Prime Minister to have earned a doctorate.

King worked as a newspaper reporter for the Toronto Globe while studying at the University of Toronto. In 1900, he became Canada's first Deputy Minister of Labour. He was first elected to Parliament as a Liberal in a 1908 by-election, and was re-elected in a 1909 by-election following his appointment as the first-ever Minister of Labour. He lost his seat in the 1911 general election, which saw the Conservatives defeat his Liberals.

Following his party's defeat, he went to the United States to work for the Rockefeller family's Foundation at their invitation, heading their new Department of Industrial Relations. He formed a close working association and friendship with the family leader, John D. Rockefeller Jr., advising him through the turbulent period of the 1914 strike and Ludlow massacre at a family-owned coal company in Colorado, which subsequently set the stage for a new era in labor management in America.

He returned to Canada to run in the 1917 election, which focused almost entirely on the conscription issue, and lost again, due to his opposition to conscription, which was supported by the majority of English Canadians.

Liberal Leader

King, in court dress, speaking on Parliament Hill during a ceremony celebrating the Diamond Jubilee of Confederation, July 1, 1927
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King, in court dress, speaking on Parliament Hill during a ceremony celebrating the Diamond Jubilee of Confederation, July 1, 1927

In 1919, he was elected leader at the first Liberal leadership convention, and soon returned to parliament in a by-election. King remained leader until 1948. In the 1921 election, his party defeated Arthur Meighen and the Conservatives, and he became Prime Minister.

In his first term as Prime Minister, he was opposed by the Progressive Party, which did not support trade tariffs. King called an election in 1925, in which the Conservatives won the most seats, but not a majority in the House of Commons. King held on to power with the support of the Progressives. Soon into his term, however, a bribery scandal in the Department of Customs was revealed, which led to more support for the Conservatives and Progressives, and the possibility that King would be forced to resign. King asked Governor General Lord Byng to dissolve Parliament and call another election, but Byng refused, the only time in Canadian history that the Governor General has exercised such a power. King resigned, and Byng asked Meighen to form a new government. When Meighen's government was defeated in the House of Commons a short time later, however, Byng called a new election in 1926. See the King-Byng Affair.

Second term

In his second term, King introduced old-age pensions. In February 1930, he appointed Cairine Wilson, whom he knew personally, as the first female senator in Canadian history. His government was in power during the beginning of the Great Depression, but lost the election of 1930 to the Conservative Party, led by Richard Bedford Bennett.

King's Liberals were returned to power once more in the 1935 election. The worst of the Depression had passed, and King implemented relief programs such as the National Housing Act and National Employment Commission. His government also created the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation in 1936, Trans-Canada Airlines (the precursor to Air Canada) in 1937, and the National Film Board of Canada in 1939.

Racism

While Minister of Labour, King was appointed to investigate the causes of and claims for compensation resulting from the 1907 Asiatic Exclusion League riots in Vancouver's Chinatown and Japantown. One of the claims for damages came from Chinese opium manufacturers, which led King to investigate the drug scene in Vancouver. King became alarmed upon hearing that white women were also opium users, not just Chinese men, and he then initiated the process that led to the first legislation outlawing narcotics in Canada, effectively an attempt to save white women from the Yellow Peril.

King hoped an outbreak of war in the 1930s could be averted and he therefore supported the appeasement policies of the British. He met with Adolf Hitler who, he remarked in his journal, came across as "a reasonable and caring man ... who might be thought of as one of the saviors of the world." Telling a Jewish delegation that Kristallnacht "might turn out to be a blessing," he refused to allow Jewish refugees who were attempting to leave Nazi Germany entry into Canada.

Despite pledges of support from Canada's Jewish community, in June 1939 King also refused to allow the 900 desperate Jewish refugees aboard the passenger ship M.S. St. Louis refuge in Canada (as did Cuba, the United States, and Britain). When asked how many Jews would be allowed to immigrate immediately after World War II, one of King's civil servants, Frederick Charles Blair, famously quipped that "none is too many". While it might be tempting to blame Blair, it was King who said he wanted to "keep this part of the continent free from unrest and from too great an intermixture of foreign strains of blood."[3] But if Blair's actions can be traced to King, then King's actions can in turn be followed to popular prejudice. When the Government did let in a few Jewish refugees, for example, there was a huge outcry, leading one historian to quip that King "had a weather vane where most people had a heart."[4]

After the bombing of Pearl Harbor in 1941, King’s government oversaw the Japanese-Canadian internment on Canada’s west coast, which gave 22,000 BC residents 24 hours to pack. This was done even though the RCMP and Canadian military had told the Government that most Japanese citizens were law-abiding and not a threat. Major General Ken Stuart even wrote to Ottawa to say "I cannot see that the Japanese Canadians constitute the slightest menace to national security."[5] The federal government confiscated and sold the property and belongings of the incarcerated Japanese at public auction. After the war, King offered Japanese-Canadians the option of “repatriation" to a war-ravaged Japan, even though many had never been there and did not speak the language; they were not allowed back to coastal areas until his government fell several years later.[citation needed]

Second World War

King George VI, Queen Elizabeth, and Prime Minister Mackenzie King in Banff Springs, Alberta, 1939
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King George VI, Queen Elizabeth, and Prime Minister Mackenzie King in Banff Springs, Alberta, 1939
King (far right) together with (from left to right) Governor General Alexander Cambridge, Franklin D. Roosevelt and Winston Churchill at the Octagon Conference, Quebec City, September, 1944
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King (far right) together with (from left to right) Governor General Alexander Cambridge, Franklin D. Roosevelt and Winston Churchill at the Octagon Conference, Quebec City, September, 1944

King realized the necessity of World War II before Hitler invaded Poland in 1939, and actually began mobilizing on 25 Aug 1939, with full mobilization on 1 September. Unlike World War I, however, when Canada was automatically at war as soon as Britain joined, King asserted Canadian autonomy by waiting until September 10, a full week after Britain's declaration, when a vote in the House of Commons took place, to support the government's decision to declare war. During this time Canada was able to acquire weapons from the United States. Upon declaring war Canada would not be able to purchase weapons from the US, under the US policy then in force of not arming belligerents. This issue soon became a moot point as the American embargo was revoked in November 1939.

King's promise not to impose conscription contributed to the defeat of Maurice Duplessis's Union Nationale Quebec provincial government in 1939 and Liberals' re-election in the 1940 election. But after the fall of France in 1940, Canada introduced conscription for home service. Still, only volunteers were to be sent overseas. King wanted to avoid a repeat of the Conscription Crisis of 1917. By 1942, the military was pressing King hard to send conscripts to Europe. In 1942, King held a national plebiscite on the issue asking the nation to relieve him of the commitment he had made during the election campaign. He said that his policy was "conscription if necessary, but not necessarily conscription."

French Canadians voted overwhelmingly against conscription, but a majority of English Canadians supported it. French and English conscripts were sent to fight in the Aleutian Islands in 1943 - technically North American soil and therefore not "overseas" - but the mix of Canadian volunteers and draftees found the Japanese had fled before their arrival. Otherwise, King continued with a campaign to recruit volunteers, hoping to address the problem with the shortage of troops caused by heavy losses in the Dieppe Raid in 1942, in Italy in 1943, and after the Battle of Normandy in 1944. In November 1944, the Government decided it was necessary to send conscripts to Europe. This led to a brief political crisis (see Conscription Crisis of 1944) and a mutiny by conscripts posted in British Columbia, but the war ended a few months later. Over 15,000 conscripts went to Europe, though only a few hundred saw combat.

King (back right) with (clockwise from King) Franklin D. Roosevelt, Governor General Alexander Cambridge and Winston Churchill on the terrace of the citadel in Quebec, Canada during the Ottawa conference
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King (back right) with (clockwise from King) Franklin D. Roosevelt, Governor General Alexander Cambridge and Winston Churchill on the terrace of the citadel in Quebec, Canada during the Ottawa conference

King was extremely unpopular among Canadian servicemen and women during the war, who were pro conscription. His appearances at Canadian Army installations in Britain (and, after 6 June 1944, in continental Europe) were invariably greeted with boos and catcalls. When he was defeated after the war in his Prince Albert riding, the servicemen's vote was considered instrumental, and a sign was placed outside the town, similar to those that had been erected in The Netherlands, reading, "This Town Liberated by the Canadian Army."

Canadian autonomy

Throughout tenure, King led Canada from a colony with responsible government to an autonomous nation within the British Commonwealth. During the Chanak Crisis of 1922, King refused to support the British without first consulting Parliament, while the Conservative leader, Arthur Meighen, supported Britain. The British were disappointed with King's response. After the King-Byng Affair, King went to the Imperial Conference of 1926 and argued for greater autonomy of the Dominions. This resulted in the Balfour Declaration 1926, which announced the equal status of all members of the British Commonwealth (as it was known then), including Britain. This eventually led to the Statute of Westminster 1931.

In the lead up to World War II, King played two roles. On the one hand, he told English Canadians that Canada would no doubt enter war if Britain did. On the other hand, he and his Quebec lieutenant Ernest Lapointe told French Canadians that Canada would only go to war if it was in the country's best interests. With the dual messages, King slowly led Canada toward war without causing strife between Canada's two main linguistic communities. As his final step in asserting Canada's autonomy, King ensured that the Canadian Parliament made its own declaration of war one week after Britain.

King's government introduced the Canadian Citizenship Act in 1946, which officially created the notion of "Canadian citizens". Prior to this, Canadians were considered British subjects living in Canada. On January 3, 1947, King received Canadian citizenship certificate number 0001.[6]

Prime Minister William Lyon Mackenzie King becomes the first person to take the Oath of Citizenship, from Chief Justice Thibaudeau Rinfret, in the Supreme Court, January 3, 1947
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Prime Minister William Lyon Mackenzie King becomes the first person to take the Oath of Citizenship, from Chief Justice Thibaudeau Rinfret, in the Supreme Court, January 3, 1947

Post-war Canada

Mackenzie King was not charismatic and did not have a large personal following. Only 8 Canadians in 100 picked him when the Canadian Gallup (CIPO) poll asked in September, 1946, "What person living in any part of the world today do you admire?" Nevertheless, his Liberal Party was re-elected in the election of 1945. King had been considered a minor player in the war by both United States President Franklin D. Roosevelt and British Prime Minister Winston Churchill. King did act as a link between the two countries between September 1939 and December 1941, but after the U.S. entered the war his position was largely redundant. King's most important contribution to wartime diplomacy was his crafting of a plan in June 1940 to host a British government in exile and to aid in the transfer of the British fleet to Canadian ports. He also hosted a major conference in Quebec City in 1943. King helped found the United Nations in 1945.

After the war, King quickly dismantled wartime controls. Unlike World War I, press censorship ended with the hostilities. He began an ambitious program of social programs and laid the groundwork for Newfoundland and Labrador's entry into Canada. King also had to deal with the deepening Cold War and the fallout from espionage revelations of Russian cipher clerk Igor Gouzenko, who defected in Ottawa in 1946.

In 1948, he retired after 22 years as prime minister, and was succeeded as Liberal Party leader, and Prime Minister of Canada, by his Justice Minister, Louis St. Laurent.

Personal life

Mackenzie King was a cautious politician who tailored his policies to prevailing opinions. "Parliament will decide," he liked to say when pressed to act.

Privately, he was highly eccentric with his preference for communing with spirits, including those of Leonardo da Vinci, Sir Wilfrid Laurier, his dead mother, and several of his Irish Terrier dogs, all named Pat. He sought personal reassurance from the spirit world, rather than seeking political advice. Indeed, after his death, one of his mediums said that she had not realized that he was a politician. King asked whether his party would win the 1935 election, one of the few times politics came up during his seances. His occult interests were not widely known during his years in office, and only became publicized later. In 1953 Time Magazine stated, "that he owned—and used—both a Ouija board and a crystal ball. In the 1970s biographers used the extensive diaries he kept during most of his life to delve deeper into his occult activities. One person he held seances with was Canadian Artist Homer Watson.

King never married, but had several close female friends, including Joan Patteson, a married woman with whom he spent some of his leisure time. Some historians have also interpreted passages in his diaries as suggesting that King regularly had sexual relations with prostitutes, although this has never been confirmed.

Part of his country retreat, now called Mackenzie King Estate, at Kingsmere in the Gatineau Park, near Ottawa, is open to the public. The house King died in, called "The Farm", is the official residence of the Speaker of the Canadian House of Commons and is not part of the park.

Mackenzie King died on July 22, 1950, at Kingsmere from pneumonia. He is buried in Mount Pleasant Cemetery, Toronto. Unmarried, King is survived by relative Margery King.

Legacy

King's image on the Canadian fifty-dollar bill
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King's image on the Canadian fifty-dollar bill

His likeness is on the Canadian fifty-dollar bill.

Following the publication of King's diaries in the 1970s, several fictional works about him were published by Canadian writers. These included Elizabeth Gourlay's novel Isabel, Allan Stratton's play Rexy and Heather Robertson's trilogy Willie: A Romance (1983), Lily: A Rhapsody in Red (1986) and Igor: A Novel of Intrigue (1989).


In 1998, there was controversy over King's exclusion from a memorial to the Quebec Conference of 1943, which was attended by King, Roosevelt, and Churchill. The monument was built by the sovereigntist Parti Québécois government of Quebec, which justified the decision on the basis that King was not important enough. Canadian federalists, however, accused the government of Quebec of trying to advance their own political agenda.

Some have suggested that King was racist, pointing to two policies; that only 4500 Jews were accepted into Canada during the Holocaust, and the internment of the Japanese Canadians during the Second World War. However, it must be noted that these were the mainstream attitudes of the time.

Mackenzie King was not charismatic or media-savvy and did not have a large personal following. It is often suggested that he would not have held power as long as he did, or even at all, during the age of television which was ushered in not long after his retirement.

Supreme Court appointments

Statue of Mackenzie King on Parliament Hill, in Ottawa, Ontario
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Statue of Mackenzie King on Parliament Hill, in Ottawa, Ontario

King chose the following jurists to be appointed as justices of the Supreme Court of Canada by the Governor General:

Woodside National Historic Site

The Woodside National Historic Site at 528 Wellington Street North, in Kitchener, Ontario, is the cherished boyhood home of William Lyon Mackenzie King. The estate has over 4.65 hectares of garden and parkland for exploring and relaxing. The house has been restored to reflect life during King's era. There is another statue of King outside Kitchener-Waterloo Collegiate and Vocational School.

Quotations

We had no shape

Because he never took sides;

And no sides

Because he never allowed them to take shape.

from F.R. Scott, "W.L.M.K."
William Lyon Mackenzie King

Sat in a corner and played with string,

Loved his mother like anything,

William Lyon Mackenzie King.

Dennis Lee, "William Lyon Mackenzie King"

"Conscription if necessary, but not necessarily conscription."

"Until the control of the issue of currency and credit is restored to government and recognized as its most conspicuous and sacred responsibility, all talks of the sovereignty of Parliament and of democracy is idle and futile... Once a nation parts with the control of its credit, it matters not who makes the laws....Usury once in control will wreck the nation."

"If some countries have too much history, we have too much geography."

"When it comes to politics, one has to do as one [does] at sea with a sailing ship... reach one's course having regard to prevailing winds."

"It is what we prevent, rather than what we do that counts most in Government."

"Where there is little or no public opinion, there is likely to be bad government, which sooner or later becomes autocratic government."

"...I believed the people had a true instinct in most matters of government when left alone. That they were not swayed, as specially favoured individuals were, by personal interest, but rather by a sense of what best served the common good. That they recognized the truth when it was put before them, and that a leader can guide so long as he kept to the right lines. I did not think it was a mark of leadership to try to make the people do what one wanted them to do...."

"This town liberated by the Canadian Army." When King was defeated in his Prince Albert riding, this sign is alleged to have been erected there, in reference to the military vote.

References

  1. ^ http://www.collectionscanada.ca/king/053201/05320117_e.html
  2. ^ William Lyon Mackenzie King's Diary online
  3. ^ Knowles, Valerie. Strangers at Our Gates: Canadian Immigration and Immigration Policy, 1540-1997, (Toronto: Dundurn, 1997).
  4. ^ Ferguson, Will. Bastards and Boneheads: Canada's Glorious Leaders Past and Present, (Vancouver: Douglas and McIntyre, 1999) pg. 168.
  5. ^ Sunahara, Ann Gomer. The Politics of Racism: The Uprooting of Japanese Canadians During the Second World War, (Toronto: Lorimer, 1981) pg. 23.
  6. ^ CBC Archives: The first officially Canadian citizens

Secondary sources

Popular books

  • Bliss, Michael. Right Honourable Men: The Descent of Canadian Politics from Macdonald to Mulroney (1994), pp. 123-184
  • Hutchison, Bruce The Incredible Canadian: A Candid Portrait of Mackenzie King: His Works, His Times, and His Nation (1953), popular bio

Television series

  • Brittain, Donald The King Chronicles National Film Board, 1988

Primary sources

External links

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Preceded by
None
Minister of Labour
1909–1911
Succeeded by
Thomas Wilson Crothers
Preceded by
Daniel McKenzie
(interim)
Leader of the Liberal Party
1919–1948
Succeeded by
Louis St. Laurent
Preceded by
Arthur Meighen
Prime Minister of Canada
1921–1926
Succeeded by
Arthur Meighen
Secretary of State for External Affairs
1921–1926
Preceded by
Arthur Meighen
Prime Minister of Canada
1926–1930
Succeeded by
R.B. Bennett
Secretary of State for External Affairs
1926–1930
Preceded by
R.B. Bennett
Secretary of State for External Affairs
1935–1946
Succeeded by
Louis St. Laurent
Prime Minister of Canada
1935–1948


Preceded by
Joseph E. Seagram
MP for Waterloo North, ON
1908–1911
Succeeded by
William G. Weichel
Preceded by
Joseph Reid
MP for Prince, PEI
1919–1921
Succeeded by
Alfred E. MacLean
Preceded by
John Armstrong
MP for York North, ON
1921–1925
Succeeded by
Thomas H. Lennox
Preceded by
Charles McDonald
MP for Prince Albert, SK
1926–1945
Succeeded by
Edward LeRoy Bowerman
Preceded by
William B. McDiarmid
MP for Glengarry, ON
1945–1949
Succeeded by
William J. Major



Persondata
NAME King, William Lyon Mackenzie
ALTERNATIVE NAMES
SHORT DESCRIPTION 10th Prime Minister of Canada (1926-1930,1935-1948)
DATE OF BIRTH December 17, 1874
PLACE OF BIRTH Berlin, Ontario
DATE OF DEATH July 22, 1950
PLACE OF DEATH Ottawa

 
 

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Political Biography. A Dictionary of Political Biography. Copyright © 1998, 2003 by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.  Read more
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