Item Ref:  BSL - 1893 Blake
 

1893 EDWARD BLAKE PREMIER OF ONTARIO DOCUMENT & COVER
HAZELL'S ANNUAL ASKS CONCURRENCE IN HIS BIOGRAPHICAL NOTE

 


Inside Page 1


Inside Page 2

Inside Page 3

Front Cover Unfolded



Hon. Edward Blake

Dominick Edward Blake, PC, QC
 2nd Premier of Ontario from 1871 to 1872.

An Entertaining Letter From "Hazell's Annual" for 1894, to the Hon E. Blake MP, requesting his review of their proposed biography in their upcoming publication. It was sent to Blake at the House of Commons and then forwarded to the Members Mansion with a ½ penny surcharge! and was designed to be a "turned cover" with return postage provided, presumably also a ½ penny short for its double weight. Blake Refused the Prime Minster role as well as a Knighthood.  A Unique Character of "Clear Grit".


BIOGRAPHICAL NOTES

Dominick Edward Blake (1833 – 1912)

Dominick Edward Blake, PC, QC, (known as Edward Blake) was Premier of Ontario, Canada, from 1871 to 1872 and leader of the Liberal Party of Canada from 1880 to 1887. He is the only non-interim federal Liberal leader never to become Prime Minister of Canada.

Blake was born in 1833, in Adelaide Township, Upper Canada (Ontario). He became leader of the Ontario Liberal Party in 1868 and premier in 1871, but left provincial politics to run in the 1872 federal election, in which he was re-elected. The "dual mandate" rule that allowed a politician to sit simultaneously in a provincial and federal house had been abolished, and Blake chose to abandon his career in provincial politics. He played a major role in exposing the government of Sir John A. Macdonald's complicity in the Pacific Scandal forcing the government's resignation. Blake was offered the Prime Ministership, but turned it down due to ill health.

When the Liberals won the subsequent 1874 federal election, Blake joined the cabinet of Prime Minister Alexander Mackenzie and served as Minister of Justice and President of the Queen's Privy Council for Canada. The Liberals were defeated in the 1878 election, and Blake succeeded Mackenzie as party leader in 1880. He failed to defeat Macdonald's Conservatives in the 1882 or 1887 elections. Blake resigned as Liberal leader in 1887, recruiting Wilfrid Laurier as his successor, and left the Canadian House of Commons in 1891, when he moved to Britain. Blake never lost his Clear Grit style and ability to bore an audience for hours on end with pedantics. Nonetheless, the Liberal Party evolved thoroughly under his leadership.

In 1892, Blake entered the British House of Commons as an Irish Nationalist Member of Parliament for the constituency of South Longford in the centre of Ireland. He served until 1907 when he resigned (obtaining the position of Steward of the Chiltern Hundreds) following a stroke and retired to Canada. From 1876 to 1900, he was the chancellor of the University of Toronto.

Document Specifications:  This is an extremely fine one sheet - four page - document on cotton wove paper, watermarked "S. George", measuring 7½" wide and 10" tall (190mm x 260mm). Printed Form Letter  with appropriate fill-ins including a postally used address panel and back as well as a postally unused return cover inside. The proposed biographic data is a one column newsprint piece pasted to an inside page. Dated 24 August 1893.  An interesting and attractive associative piece of Edward Blake during his term as a Member of Parliament in the House of Commons.


Unused Return "Turned Cover" Envelope


Reverse of Used Cover

 Offered by Berryhill & Sturgeon, Ltd.

End of Item - BSL - BSL - 1893 Blake

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