Sir Oliver Mowat (Heritage)
ISBN-13:
9780802034717
ISBN-10:
0802034713
Edition:
0
Author:
A Margaret Evans
Publication date:
1992
Publisher:
University of Toronto Press
Format:
Paperback
464 pages
Category:
Canadian
,
Historical
,
Canada
,
Americas History
,
World History
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Book details
ISBN-13:
9780802034717
ISBN-10:
0802034713
Edition:
0
Author:
A Margaret Evans
Publication date:
1992
Publisher:
University of Toronto Press
Format:
Paperback
464 pages
Category:
Canadian
,
Historical
,
Canada
,
Americas History
,
World History
Summary
Sir Oliver Mowat (Heritage) (ISBN-13: 9780802034717 and ISBN-10: 0802034713), written by authors
A Margaret Evans, was published by University of Toronto Press in 1992.
With an overall rating of 3.8 stars, it's a notable title among other
Canadian
(Historical, Canada, Americas History, World History) books. You can easily purchase or rent Sir Oliver Mowat (Heritage) (Paperback) from BooksRun,
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Description
Few political leaders in Ontario's history have had as lasting an impact on the province, and perhaps on the nation, as Oliver Mowat, premier from 1872 to 1896. Under his leadership Ontario flourished economically, socially, and politically. Among the many political skills that Mowat brought to office, one of the most useful was pragmatism. He was able to establish a rock-solid style that appealed to a wide spectrum of the electorate: rural and urban, Catholic and Protestant. He was also adept at redrawing constituency boundaries and extending the franchise at opportune times. Margaret Evans's biography of Mowat is in some ways the story of a golden age in the province's history. During this period Ontario modernized agriculture and industry, opened the north, developed natural resources, addressed social problems, and accepted trade unions. Above all, it established itself as the dominant province in Confederation. This last was accomplished through a stubborn struggle with Ottawa. John A. Macdonald fought hard against Mowat's provincial-rights moves, and referred to the premier as 'the little tyrant.' But Mowat prevailed. The Canada that emerged was a less centralized state than Macdonald had ever wanted; the provinces had substantially more power. A century later, that legacy of diffused power has been at the centre of much of Canada's constitutional debate.
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