Mowat, Sir Oliver National Historic Person

Toronto, Ontario
Portrait of Oliver Mowat © Expired; Credit: Canada. Patent and Copyright Office / Library and Archives Canada / PA-028973
Portrait
© Expired; Credit: Canada. Patent and Copyright Office / Library and Archives Canada / PA-028973
Portrait of Oliver Mowat © Expired; Credit: Canada. Patent and Copyright Office / Library and Archives Canada / PA-028985Portrait of Oliver Mowat © Expired; Credit: Canada. Patent and Copyright Office / Library and Archives Canada / PA-028973Mowat, Sir Oliver © Parks Canada
Address : 900 Bay Street, Toronto, Ontario

Recognition Statute: Historic Sites and Monuments Act (R.S.C., 1985, c. H-4)
Designation Date: 1934-05-28
Life Date: 1820 to 1903

Other Name(s):
  • Mowat, Sir Oliver  (Designation Name)

Importance: Father of Confederation, Premier of Ontario (1872-96)

Plaque(s)


Existing plaque: Mounted inside Mowat Block 900 Bay Street, Toronto, Ontario

Born in Kingston, where he was trained as a lawyer, Oliver Mowat served as a Toronto alderman before his election to the legislature of the united Canadas as a Reformer in 1857. He joined the Great Coalition in 1864 and attended the Quebec Conference. From 1872 to 1896 he served as premier and attorney-general of Ontario, a period of office noted for the introduction of the ballot (1874), the extension of the franchise (1888), and determined fight for provincial rights. In 1896 Mowat was named to the Senate and became Minister of Justice in the Laurier cabinet, but he resigned the next year to become Lieutenant-Governor of Ontario.