*** Welcome to piglix ***

Raymond Préfontaine

Mayor
Raymond Préfontaine
Raymond Préfontaine - BANQ.png
25th Mayor of Montreal
In office
1898–1902
Preceded by Richard Wilson-Smith
Succeeded by James Cochrane
Personal details
Born 16 September 1850
Longueuil, Province of Canada
Died 25 December 1905(1905-12-25) (aged 55)
Paris, France
Profession lawyer

Joseph Raymond Fournier Préfontaine, PC, QC (16 September 1850 – 25 December 1905) was a Canadian politician.

Born in Longueuil, Quebec, he studied at the law faculty of McGill College, articled with Antoine-Aimé Dorion and Christophe-Alphonse Geoffrion, and was called to the bar in 1873. He was named a Queen's Counsel in 1899.

In 1875, he was elected to the Legislative Assembly of Quebec for the riding of Chambly. A Liberal, he was defeated in 1878. He was re-elected in an 1879 by-election, but was defeated again in 1881.

He was acclaimed to the Canadian House of Commons for the riding of Chambly in an 1886 by-election. A Liberal, he was re-elected in every election in one or another riding until dying in office in 1905. From 1902 to 1905, he was the Minister of Marine and Fisheries. When Joseph-Israel Tarte resigned from the Cabinet as Minister of Public Works in October 1902, Wilfrid Laurier, under pressure from Montréalers, gave Préfontaine the portfolio of Marine and Fisheries and, for the same reason, transferred to it from public works as "the major services relating to navigation." The new minister, while maintaining his predecessor’s policy, tackled his duties with dynamic energy. He approved experiments in winter navigation and a program for installing illuminated buoys in the channel of the St Lawrence. He appointed a commissioner to preside over all inquiries into marine disasters, in place of the harbour commissioners. He also investigated the possibility of creating an independent Canadian Navy. He sent Captain Joseph-Elzéar Bernier to explore the Arctic in order to strengthen Canada’s rights in this region.


...
Wikipedia

...