Charles Edward Hamilton

Charles Edward Hamilton (1844[1] – 25 May 1919) was a Canadian politician serving as a member of the Legislative Assembly of Manitoba and as the seventh Mayor of Winnipeg in 1885.

Mayor
Charles Edward Hamilton
7th Mayor of Winnipeg
In office
1885–1885
Member of the Legislative Assembly of Manitoba, Winnipeg South
In office
1885–1886
Member of the Legislative Assembly of Manitoba, Shoal Lake
In office
1886–1888
Personal details
Born1844[1]
Rochester, England[1]
Died25 May 1919 (aged 74–75)
Ramsey County, Minnesota, U.S.
SpouseAlma Ashworth (m. 1884)

Born in Rochester, England, Hamilton emigrated to Canada before studying law. Hamilton married Alma Lizzie Ashworth of Ottawa.[2] After moving from St. Catharines, Ontario to Winnipeg in 1881, he established a law practice. In the 1884 city election, he won the contest for mayor as a citizen's candidate.[1]

On 24 February 1885, Hamilton won a provincial by-election in the Winnipeg South riding for the Conservative party. In the 1886 provincial election, he won the Shoal Lake riding.[3]

Hamilton left provincial politics and in 1888 moved to Saint Paul, Minnesota where he became Vice-President of the Pacific and Oriental Investment Company in 1897,[1] as well as serving as the British Vice-Consul for Minnesota.[2] Hamilton died in 1919.[4]

Hamilton's son, Charles Ashworth Hamilton, was the founder of Hamilton's Stores in Yellowstone National Park.[2]

Hamilton Avenue in Winnipeg is named in C.E. Hamilton's honour.[1]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f Manitoba Historical Society - Charles Edward Hamilton
  2. ^ a b c Petersen, Gwen (1985). Yellowstone Pioneers: The Story of the Hamilton Stores and Yellowstone National Park. Hamilton Stores. pp. 22–24. ISBN 0-86679-016-0.
  3. ^ MLA Biographies - Deceased at the Legislative Assembly of Manitoba Archived March 30, 2014, at the Wayback Machine
  4. ^ Petersen, p. 29