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William Whiteway

The Right Honourable
William Whiteway
KCMG, PC, KC
Whiteway.jpg
Premier of the Colony of Newfoundland
In office
1878–1885
Monarch Queen Victoria
Governor John Hawley Glover
Henry Berkeley Fitzhardinge Maxse
Glover 2nd term
Preceded by Frederick Carter
Succeeded by Robert Thorburn
Premier of the Colony of Newfoundland
In office
1889–1894
Monarch Victoria
Governor Henry Arthur Blake
Terence O'Brien
Preceded by Robert Thorburn
Succeeded by Augustus F. Goodridge
Premier of the Colony of Newfoundland
In office
1895–1897
Monarch Victoria
Governor Herbert Harley Murray
Preceded by Daniel Joseph Greene
Succeeded by James Spearman Winter
Solicitor-General of Newfoundland
In office
1874–1878
Member of the House of Assembly of Newfoundland
In office
1874–1894
Member of the House of Assembly of Newfoundland
In office
1859–1869
Personal details
Born William Vallance Whiteway
April 1, 1828
Buckyett, Littlehempston, Devon, England
Died June 24, 1908 (1908-06-25) (aged 80)
St. John's, Newfoundland
Nationality Newfoundlander
Political party Conservative 1859-1885
Liberal 1885-1897
Spouse(s) Mary Lightbourne (m. 1862, d. 1868)
Catherine Anne Davies m. 1872
Children 3 sons and 3 daughters (including Harriet Louise Whiteway)
Occupation lawyer

Sir William Vallance Whiteway, KCMG, PC, KC (April 1, 1828 – June 24, 1908) was a politician and three time Premier of Newfoundland.

Born in Littlehempston, Devon, England, Whiteway emigrated to Newfoundland in 1843 and entered the law in 1852. In 1859 he was elected to the House of Assembly as a member of the Conservative Party of Newfoundland and became a supporter of Canadian confederation. He lost his seat in the 1869 election on confederation but returned in 1874 and served as Solicitor-General in the government of Sir Frederick Carter before becoming Premier in 1878 when he succeeded Carter as leader of the Conservatives. He was made a Queen's Counsel in 1865. While serving as Solicitor-General, Whiteway was one of the counsel representing the British Government before the Halifax Fisheries Commission, which adjudicated a dispute over north Atlantic fishing rights between the British Empire and the United States. The Commission gave an award of $5,500,000 to be paid by the United States to the British Government. Newfoundland received $1,000,000 as its share of the award.

Whiteway's major policy ambition was the construction of the transinsular railway spanning the island which was begun in 1881 and which he believed would spur economic development of the colony. In 1885 his Conservative party was destroyed by sectarian riots at Harbour Grace which resulted in several Protestants leaving the Whiteway government in protest over its conciliatory attitude towards Catholics. Leading the dissenters was James Spearman Winter, Whiteway's Solicitor-General and grand master of Newfoundland's Orange Order.


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