The city of Ottawa, Canada held municipal elections on December 2, 1935.
Candidate | Votes | % |
---|---|---|
J. E. Stanley Lewis | 17,810 | 49.28 |
Fulgence Charpentier | 9,755 | 26.99 |
Patrick Nolan (X) | 6,414 | 17.75 |
Edward H. Hinchey | 2,164 | 5.99 |
Are you in favour of the adoption of daylight saving in the city during June, July and August only instead of during the months of May, June, July, August and September as at present? | ||
---|---|---|
Option | Votes | % |
No | 17,885 | |
Yes | 16,354 |
Are you in favour of electing members of City Council, including the Mayor and members of the Board of Control, every second year to hold office for a period of two years? | ||
---|---|---|
Option | Votes | % |
No | 19,981 | |
Yes | 13,342 |
(Only property owners could vote for the following measure)
Are you in favour of the corporation paying all its share of direct relief each year out of the current revenues of the corporation for this purpose? | ||
---|---|---|
Option | Votes | % |
No | 5,601 | |
Yes | 4,429 |
(4 elected)
Candidate | Votes | % |
---|---|---|
G. M. Geldert (X) | 19,362 | |
George H. Dunbar | 14,232 | |
Allan B. Turner | 13,252 | |
J. Edward McVeigh (X) | 12,725 | |
Thomas Brethour | 10,018 | |
E. A. Bourque | 9,882 | |
Harold C. Shipman | 9,563 | |
Martin M. Walsh | 7,650 | |
Mrs. C. H. Hesser | 1,588 | |
Percy E. Bedford | 789 | |
William Watson | 578 | |
W. Gibbs | 424 | |
James Sidey | 234 |
(2 elected from each ward)
Rideau Ward | ||
---|---|---|
Candidate | Votes | % |
A. W. Spearman (X) | 934 | |
Shirley S. Slinn (X) | 904 | |
Fred J. Goodhouse | 660 |
By Ward | ||
---|---|---|
Candidate | Votes | % |
J. Albert Parisien (X) | 1,329 | |
Eric Query (X) | 1,018 | |
Mendoza Normand | 959 | |
Joseph P. Butler | 482 | |
H. Louis Tasse | 204 | |
J. P. Romeo Croteau | 193 |
St. George's Ward | ||
---|---|---|
Candidate | Votes | % |
Arthur Pinard (X) | 2,351 | |
Norman H. MacDonald (X) | 2,159 | |
Arthur A. Moeser | 1,203 | |
W. P. Clermont | 287 |
Wellington Ward | ||
---|---|---|
Candidate | Votes | % |
James W. McNabb (X) | 2,175 | |
Arthur J. Ash | 1,042 | |
Sam Chandler | 1,002 | |
Robert Burnett | 823 | |
James McLaren | 671 | |
T. M. Rae | 402 | |
Otto O'Regan | 278 | |
James J. Enright | 251 | |
S. J. Johnson | 149 | |
E. J. Kesteron | 49 | |
James Connah | 19 |
Capital Ward | ||
---|---|---|
Candidate | Votes | % |
Edward Band (X) | 2,931 | |
Harold D. Marshall (X) | 2,596 | |
A. T. MacFarlane | 1,216 | |
Cecil Elbourne | 228 |
Dalhousie Ward | ||
---|---|---|
Candidate | Votes | % |
Daniel McCann (X) | 2,248 | |
Wilbert Hamilton (X) | 1,989 | |
James J. McVeigh | 959 | |
R. E. Brule | 925 | |
James R. Sands | 742 |
Elmdale Ward | ||
---|---|---|
Candidate | Votes | % |
William H. Marsden (X) | 1,595 | |
Jim Forward (X) | 1,458 | |
Henry Bradley | 1,207 | |
Harry Low | 825 |
Victoria Ward | ||
---|---|---|
Candidate | Votes | % |
Nelson J. Lacasse (X) | 1,448 | |
Joseph P. Nolan (X) | 1,249 | |
J. T. H. Langdon | 1,191 | |
Dolphio Bonenfant | 488 |
Ottawa Ward | ||
---|---|---|
Candidate | Votes | % |
Aristide Belanger (X) | 1,754 | |
Napoleon Bordeleau (X) | 1,544 | |
A. Edmond Beauchamp | 1,159 |
Riverdale Ward | ||
---|---|---|
Candidate | Votes | % |
David McMillan (X) | 2,287 | |
George Sloan (X) | 1,967 | |
Harold Maguire | 784 | |
Robert L. Haggard | 195 |
Central Ward | ||
---|---|---|
Candidate | Votes | % |
Finley McRae (X) | 1,969 | |
Fred Jounreaux | 1,806 | |
T. H. Kirby Bangs | 1,380 | |
Caroline A. Cullock | 757 | |
V. R. Leseaux | 382 |
The On-to-Ottawa Trek was a mass protest movement in Canada in 1935 sparked by unrest among unemployed single men in federal relief camps principally in Western Canada. Federal relief camps were brought in under Prime Minister R. B. Bennett’s government as a result of the Great Depression. The Great Depression crippled the Canadian economy and left one in nine citizens on relief. The relief, however, did not come free; the Bennett government ordered the Department of National Defence to organize work camps where single unemployed men were used to construct roads and other public works at a rate of twenty cents per day. The men in the relief camps were living in poor conditions with very low wages. The men decided to unite in 1933, led by Arthur "Slim" Evans, an officer of the Workers' Unity League (WUL). The Workers' Unity League helped the men organize the Relief Camp Workers' Union.
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