Louis-Olivier Taillon
Template:Short description Template:Use Canadian English Template:Infobox officeholder Sir Louis-Olivier Taillon Template:Post-nominals (Template:IPA; September 26, 1840 – April 25, 1923) was a Canadian lawyer and politician. He was the eighth premier of Quebec, serving two separate terms.
Political career
Taillon's first term of office was just four days, from January 25 to January 29, 1887. This term came at the end of the Conservative government of his predecessor John Jones Ross. Ross had lost the 1886 Quebec election, but had tried to cling to power in a minority government for a few more months.
Taillon was Leader of the Opposition from 1887 until 1890, when he lost the 1890 election and his own seat.
He briefly returned to the practice of law, but following the removal of Liberal Honoré Mercier from office by the Lieutenant-Governor of Quebec, Taillon became minister without portfolio in the government of Charles-Eugène Boucher de Boucherville. Taillon became premier when Boucher de Boucherville resigned. Taillon lost the 1890 election but continued as leader of the party.
He resigned in 1896 and moved into federal politics to serve as Postmaster-General in the very short-lived federal Conservative government of Charles Tupper, from May to July 1896. He failed to gain a federal seat in the 1896 federal election, and likewise failed to secure a seat in the 1900 federal election, ending his political career. In 1916, he was made a Knight Bachelor.
Personal life
Taillon was born in Terrebonne, Lower Canada (now Quebec). He was the son of Aimé Taillon, a farmer, and Josephte Daunais. Taillon married Georgiana Archambault in 1875. Archambault and their child died shortly after the child's birth in January 1876.<ref name="canbio">Template:Cite DCB</ref>
By the 1920s, Taillon had lost his sight and by 1922 had cut off his beard, his political trademark. Taillon lived in the Institution des Sourdes-Muettes on Rue Saint-Denis in Montreal. Taillon died in 1923.<ref name="canbio"/>
See also
References
External links
Template:S-start Template:Succession box Template:S-end
- 1840 births
- 1923 deaths
- Canadian Knights Bachelor
- Conservative Party of Canada (1867–1942) candidates for the Canadian House of Commons
- Lawyers in Quebec
- Members of the King's Privy Council for Canada
- Premiers of Quebec
- Presidents of the National Assembly of Quebec
- Quebec political party leaders
- People from Terrebonne, Quebec
- Burials at Notre Dame des Neiges Cemetery