Ralph Smith (Canadian politician)

Ralph Smith
Member of the Canadian Parliament
for Vancouver
In office
1900–1904
Preceded by William Wallace Burns McInnes
Succeeded by District was abolished in 1903
Member of the Canadian Parliament
for Nanaimo
In office
1904–1911
Preceded by District was created in 1903
Succeeded by Francis Henry Shepherd
Member of the Legislative Assembly of British Columbia for Nanaimo
In office
1898–1900
In office
1916–1917
Personal details
Born (1858-08-08)August 8, 1858
Newcastle upon Tyne, England
Died February 17, 1917(1917-02-17) (aged 58)
Victoria, British Columbia
Political party Liberal

Ralph Smith (August 8, 1858 February 17, 1917) was a Canadian coal miner, labour leader, and politician.

Born in Newcastle upon Tyne, England, he emigrated to Canada with his wife in 1891 settling in Nanaimo, British Columbia. A miner by trade, Smith was a moderate trade unionist in Nanaimo. In 1898, he won election to the Legislative Assembly of British Columbia on a moderate "Liberal-Labour" platform. He ran for Vancouver's seat in the Canadian House of Commons in the 1900 federal election. Reports vary on whether he ran as an Independent Labour-Liberal candidate defeating the official Liberal and Conservative candidates, but once elected, he joined the Liberal caucus. He was re-elected in the 1904 and 1908 elections as a Liberal. He was defeated in the 1911 election. Smith subsequently returned to provincial politics and, returned to the provincial legislature in the 1916 provincial election that brought the British Columbia Liberal Party to power.

Smith served as Minister of Finance in the government of Premier Harlan Carey Brewster, and died in office on February 17, 1917. His wife, Mary Ellen Smith, succeeded him in the subsequent by-election (held January 1918) as an Independent Liberal Member of the Legislative Assembly (MLA). She subsequently became the first female cabinet minister in the British Empire.

Ralph Smith was a supporter of women's suffrage, which was enacted in the province shortly after the Liberals came to power after ten previous attempts over the years had failed.

References


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