Napoléon Belcourt

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by YUL89YYZ (talk | contribs) at 00:07, 23 February 2007 (Update succession box). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

The Hon. Napoléon Belcourt
Credit: Topley Studio / Library and Archives Canada / PA-033772

Napoléon Antoine Belcourt, PC (September 15 1860August 7 1932) was a Franco-Ontarian parliamentarian in Canada.

Belcourt was born in Toronto to a French-Canadian family and raised in Trois-Rivières, Quebec. He studied law at Université Laval and began his legal practice in Montreal in 1882 before moving to Ottawa in 1884. He joined the law faculty at the University of Ottawa in 1891, and became proprietor of the newspaper Le Temps which supported the Liberal Party of Wilfrid Laurier.

He first ran for a seat in the Canadian House of Commons in the 1891 election but was defeated. He won a seat in the 1896 election, and used his position as a Member of Parliament (MP) to lobby in favour of the Franco-Ontarian community.

In 1904, he became Speaker of the Canadian House of Commons but only remained in that position for the rest of that Parliament's term. He stepped down following the 1904 election, but remained an MP.

In 1907, he was appointed to the Canadian Senate by Laurier.

Belcourt became a leader in the movement for French language Separate Schools in Ontario. He presided over the first Congress of Franco-Ontarians in 1910 called to oppose the Ontario government's attempts to suppress the use of the French language in schools. He was also a leader in the struggle against Regulation 17 which was implemented by the provincial government in June 1912 to limit the use of French as a language of instruction in both the public and separate school systems. Opposition culminated in demonstrations of several thousand people in Ottawa with Belcourt speaking on behalf of the protesters.

He unsuccessfully argued against Regulation 17 in Ontario's Supreme Court in 1914. Hed appealed all the way to the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council in Britain, where he argued that the Regulation violated the rights of French taxpayers to have their money used in accordance to their wishes, and that it deprived citizens the right to use their own language and decide upon their children's language of instruction. While Belcourt lost in court, the protest movement he led prevented the Regulation from being fully implemented.

In 1924, Belcourt was made Canada's Minister Plenipotentiary to the Interallied Conference in London and, the next year, he presided over the meeting of the Inter-Parliamentary Union in Ottawa.

External links

Parliament of Canada
Preceded by Member of Parliament from Ottawa (City of)
1896-1907
Succeeded by
Political offices
Preceded by Speaker of the Canadian House of Commons
1904-1905
Succeeded by