REFORM AND PROGRESS
The result of the election was the
defeat of the government. Mr. Tilley lost his
seat for St. John city, and the Hon. James Brown, the
surveyor-general, was rejected by the county of Charlotte,
so that two of the principal members of the executive
were not in their places when the House was called
together in July. The city of St. John, and the
city and county of St. John, sent a solid phalanx of
six members opposed to prohibition, and an Act repealing
the prohibitory liquor law was passed by a vote of
thirty-eight to two. The new government which
was formed had for its principal members, the Hon.
John H. Gray, who became attorney-general; the Hon.
John C. Allen, solicitor-general; the Hon. R. D. Wilmot,
provincial secretary; the Hon. John Montgomery, surveyor-general,
and the Hon. Francis McPhelim, postmaster-general.
The other members of the executive council were the
Hon. Edward B. Chandler, the Hon. Robert L. Hazen
and the Hon. Charles McPherson.
When the House met in July, the Hon.
Charles Simonds, of St. John, was elected speaker,
and it was soon discovered, after the liquor bill had
been disposed of, that the majority supporting the
government was so small as to make it impossible for
them to accomplish any useful legislation. When
the legislature again met, in the early part of 1857,
it was seen that in a House of forty-one members twenty
were arrayed against the government, and the only
way in which government business could be done was
by the casting vote of the speaker. This condition
of affairs speedily became intolerable, because it
practically made legislation impossible, but it was
brought to an end by Mr. McMonagle, one of the members
for the county of Kings, withdrawing his support from
the government. Two courses only were now open
to them, to tender their resignations or advise the
dissolution of the legislature, and they chose the
latter. The House of Assembly was dissolved by
proclamation on April 1st, 1857, and the writs for
the election were made returnable on May 16th.
The excitement attending this second
election was, if possible, even greater than during
the election of 1856, for the public mind had been
wrought up to a high state of tension by the proceedings
in the House and the numerous divisions in which the
government was supported only by the casting vote
of the speaker. The result of the election was
so unfavourable to the Gray-Wilmot government that
they at once tendered their resignations to the lieutenant-governor,
agreeing to hold office only until their successors
were appointed. The most bitter contest of the
election centred in the city of St. John, and it resulted
in the election of Mr. Tilley, with Mr. James A. Harding
for his colleague, the latter having changed his views
in regard to the question at issue since the previous
election, when he was chosen as an opponent of the
government of which Tilley had been a member.
When the Gray-Wilmot government resigned, the lieutenant-governor
sent for Mr. Fisher, and entrusted to him the business
of forming a new government. The government thus
formed comprised the Hons. James Brown, S. L.
Tilley, William Henry Steeves, John M. Johnson, Albert
J. Smith, David Wark and Charles Watters. The
Hon. Charles Fisher became attorney-general, and,
resigning his seat, was reelected for the county of
York prior to the meeting of the legislature on June
24th, 1857. The session lasted only until July
1st, being merely held for the purpose of disposing
of the necessary business. James A. Harding was
elected speaker of the House, and the legislation
was confined to the passage of the supply bills, and
matters that were urgent. Tilley took no part
in the legislation of this session, for his seat immediately
became vacant by his appointment as provincial secretary.
The other departments were filled by the appointment
of Mr. Brown to the office of surveyor-general; of
Mr. Charles Watters, to the office of solicitor-general,
and of John M. Johnson as postmaster-general.
The legislature met again on February
10th, 1858, and the speech from the throne dealt mainly
with the financial crisis, the Intercolonial Railway,
and the progress that was being made in the construction
of the line between St. John and Shediac as a part
of what was termed the European and North American
Railway. The speech also referred to the fact
that the surplus civil list fund had been, by arrangement
with the British government made the previous year,
placed at the disposal of the House of Assembly.
It was soon seen that the government was strong in
the House, the first test vote being that taken on
the passage of the address in reply to the speech
from the throne. This came in the form of an
amendment, regretting that the arrangement in regard
to the surplus civil list fund had been acceded to
without the consent of the House. This amendment
to the address received the support of only six members.
A return brought down at an early period in the session
showed that the revenue of the province for the fiscal
year, ending October 31st, 1857, amounted to $668,252
an increase of $86,528 over the previous year.
Of this sum upwards of $540,000 came from import duties
and what were termed railway impost, which was simply
duties levied on imports for the purpose of defraying
the cost of the railways then building. The casual
and territorial revenue yielded only eighteen thousand
pounds but the export duties reached almost twenty
thousand pounds.
The Intercolonial Railway still continued
to engage the attention of the legislature, and correspondence
with the secretary of state, with the government of
Canada, and with the government of Nova Scotia, in
regard to this great work, was laid before the House
soon after the session opened. The government
of New Brunswick consulted with the governments of
Canada and Nova Scotia as to what assistance should
be given by the imperial government towards the construction
of the Intercolonial Railway from Halifax to Quebec,
in the form of a guarantee of interest. The British
government professed to feel a strong sense of the
importance of the object, but thought they would not
be justified in applying to parliament for the required
guarantee, because the heavy expenditures to which
Great Britain had been subjected did not leave them
at liberty to pledge its revenue for the purpose of
assisting in the construction of public works of this
description, however desirable in themselves.
The correspondence on the subject of the Intercolonial
Railway extended over a period of more than twenty
years and grew to enormous proportions, but it is
safe to assert that this line of railway would not
have been constructed in the nineteenth century but
for the fact that it was undertaken by the Canadian
Dominion as a work which had to be built for the purpose
of carrying out the terms of confederation as set
out in the British North America Act (section 145).
The railway to Shediac was finally
completed and opened for traffic on August 5th, 1860,
its length being one hundred and eight miles.
The nineteen miles between Pointe du Chene and Moncton
had been open as early as August, 1857, and the nine
miles from St. John to Rothesay, on June 1st, 1858.
The railway was opened from St. John to Hampton in
June, 1859, and to Sussex in November of the same
year. Although the people of the province had
abated something of their enthusiasm for railways by
the time the St. John and Shediac line was finished,
still its opening was a great event, because it was
the commencement of a new era in transportation and
gave St. John access to the north shore, from which
it had previously been practically shut out. Goods
could now be sent by means of railway and steamer
to Prince Edward Island, and to the New Brunswick
ports on the Gulf of St. Lawrence, and a community
of interest which did not exist before was thus created
between the most remote sections of the province.
The traffic receipts of the complete
line were thought to be highly satisfactory; the business
for the first three months amounted to about $45,000,
and yielded a revenue of $18,000. This was a good
showing and gave promise of still better things for
the future. It may be interesting to state that
in the last year that the railway was operated by
the government of the province, the gross receipts
amounted to $148,330, and the net receipts to $51,760.
The gross and net revenue of the road had shown a
steady increase from the first, and although it had
been a costly public work the people of the province
considered it a good investment. It was only
after it had passed into the hands of the government
of Canada, and become a part of the Intercolonial Railway,
that any colour was given to the accusation that it
was an unprofitable line. The railway from St.
John to Shediac had always paid well, and probably,
if dissociated from its connecting lines, would at
this day pay three or four per cent, upon its original
cost.
The legislation of the province between
1858 and 1861, although it included many useful measures,
evolved nothing that calls for particular mention,
with the exception of the law which provided for voting
by ballot. This was an innovation to which many
were opposed, but which the Liberal party very properly
considered necessary to the protection of the voter,
who was liable to be coerced by his employer, or by
those who had financial relations with him. The
ballot system introduced by the government was quite
imperfect and did not insure absolute secrecy, because
it did not provide for an official ballot such as is
required in the system of election which now prevails
in connection with the choice of members to our Canadian
parliament. Yet it was a vast improvement on
open voting, not only because it gave the voter a certain
degree of protection, but also from the fact that
it tended to promote order at elections, and to do
away with that riotous spirit which was characteristic
of the earlier contests in the province.
In 1859 an important step was taken
for the reorganization of King’s College, which
by an Act passed in that year, was changed into the
University of New Brunswick. There had always
been a great deal of dissatisfaction with the college
in consequence of its denominational character, and
in 1854 an Act was passed empowering the lieutenant-governor
to appoint a commission to inquire into the state of
King’s College, its management and utility, with
a view to improving it. The commissioners appointed
were the Hon. John H. Gray, the Rev. Egerton Ryerson,
J. W. Dawson, the Hon. John S. Saunders and the Hon.
James Brown. The report, which was dated December
28th, 1854, was laid before both branches of the legislature
in 1855. In 1857 the college council appointed
a committee and prepared a draft of a bill which was
laid before the legislature. This, with a few
slight alterations, was the bill which was passed
in 1859 for the establishment of the University of
New Brunswick, and in this bill were embodied the principal
recommendations of the commissioners appointed in 1854
to enquire into the state of the college. This
Act transferred to the University of New Brunswick
all the property of King’s College and its endowment,
and made the university liable for the payment of
the debts and the performance of the contracts of
King’s College. It created a new governing
body for the college to be styled the senate, to be
appointed by the governor in council, and the president
of the college was required to be a member of that
body and also to be a layman. It conferred upon
the senate the power of appointing the professors
and other officers of the university, except the president,
and also the power of removing them from office, subject
to the approval of the governor in council. It
also authorized the senate to fix their salaries.
It abolished the professorship of theology and provided
for the affiliation of other institutions with the
university, and also for a number of free scholars.
This Act, which was passed in April, 1859, was especially
approved by Her Majesty in council on January 25th,
1860. Thus a new era in the higher education of
New Brunswick was commenced, and a long step was taken
towards making the college more acceptable to the
people of that province. Great hopes were entertained
at the time that this liberalizing of the constitution
of the college would lead to a large increase in the
number of its students, and a more general interest
in its work, but, unfortunately, as the sequel showed,
these hopes were only partially realized.
During the spring of 1860 circumstances
occurred which led to the resignation of the postmaster-general,
the Hon. Charles Connell. The legislature having
adopted the decimal system of currency in the place
of the pounds, shillings and pence which had been the
currency of the province since its foundation, Mr.
Connell, in March, 1860, was authorized to obtain
a new set of postage stamps of the denominations required
for use in the postal service of the province.
No person, at that time, thought that a political
crisis would arise out of this order, but it appears
that Mr. Connell, guided by the example of presidents
and postmasters-general of the United States, had made
up his mind that instead of the likeness of the queen,
which had been upon all the old postage stamps of
the province, the five-cent stamp, the one which would
be most in use, should bear the impress of his own
countenance. Accordingly the Connell postage stamp,
which is now one of the rarest and most costly of
all in the lists of collectors, was procured and was
ready to be used, when Mr. Connell’s colleagues
in the government discovered what was going on and
took steps to prevent the new five-cent stamp from
being issued. The correspondence on the subject,
which will be found in the journals of 1861, is curious
and interesting; it ended in the withdrawal of the
objectionable stamps and in the resignation of Mr.
Connell, who complained that he had lost the confidence
of his colleagues, and in resigning, charged them with
neglecting the affairs of the province. Only a
few of the Connell stamps got into circulation, the
remainder of the issue being destroyed. Mr. Connell’s
place as postmaster-general was filled by the appointment
of James Steadman.
In the early part of 1861 a very important
event occurred in connection with the government which
produced a lasting effect on provincial politics.
Charges were made by a St. John Conservative paper,
The Colonial Empire, in which it was stated
that members of the government and certain Crown lands
officials had been purchasing the most desirable and
valuable Crown lands of the province for speculative
purposes, and that in bringing these lands to sale
the government regulations had been violated and the
public treasury had suffered. A committee of the
House was appointed to investigate these charges,
and inquiry established the fact that an official
of the Crown lands department had purchased some eight
hundred acres. These lands were all bought at
public sale, but in the forms of application other
names were used, which was a violation of the rules
of the department. A portion of the press at the
time created a widespread excitement upon this subject,
and the services of the official referred to were
dispensed with. Some of the supporters of the
government also took such ground in reference to the
attorney-general, Mr. Fisher, that his retirement
from the government became necessary, the accusation
against him being that he had negligently permitted
some improper sales of Crown lands to be made.
It was felt at the time by some that the penalty that
was paid by the attorney-general was excessive for
the offence; but, under the excitement then existing,
it was the only course that could be taken to avoid
the defeat of the government. At the general
election that followed a few months later, Mr. Fisher
was reelected for the county of York, and later on,
after the excitement had passed over, the delinquent
Crown lands official was reinstated. At the same
election, that took place in 1861, the government
was handsomely sustained, after one of the warmest
contests that had ever taken place in New Brunswick.
Probably the most effective nomination speech ever
made by Tilley, during his long political career,
was the one then delivered at the court-house, St.
John, in his own defence, and in the vindication of
his government against the charges made by the Opposition
candidates and press.