William James Stewart
Template:Short description Template:About Template:Use Canadian English Template:Infobox officeholder William James Stewart Template:Post-nominals (February 13, 1889 – September 28, 1969) was a Canadian politician. He was also a member of the Orange Order in Canada. Stewart also owned and operated the Bates and Dodds Funeral Home on Queen Street West in Toronto.<ref name=bio/>
Early life
He was born in Toronto and first worked as an office boy at a bicycle shop. His education largely consisted of evening courses taken at Shaw Business School in Toronto.<ref name=bio>Template:Cite book</ref>
Political life
Mayor of Toronto
Stewart was alderman for Ward 5 in Toronto from 1924 to 1931. He defeated former mayor Sam McBride, who was attempting to return to office, in the 1931 mayoral election and served as Mayor of Toronto from 1931 until 1934. Stewart was the first mayor to use regular radio broadcasts to keep Toronto citizens informed. He also pushed for the restoration of Fort York, which was re-opened in 1934. He entered provincial politics in 1936 when he ran for the leadership of the Ontario Conservative Party. He came in third place<ref name=bio/> behind Earl Rowe and George Drew.Template:Citation needed He was elected in a by-election on October 5, 1938, as Conservative Member of the Legislative Assembly of Ontario for Parkdale in Toronto's west end.<ref name="OLA Bio">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
Stewart also owned and operated the Bates And Dodds Funeral Home at 931 Queen Street West at Strachan Avenue
Speaker of the Legislative Assembly
Following the 1943 election that brought George Drew's Tories to power, Stewart became Speaker of the legislature, a difficult task as the Progressive Conservatives (as they were known by then) had only a minority government. He was reappointed Speaker following the 1945 election until he suddenly resigned in March 1947 to become a backbench Member of Provincial Parliament (MPP). Farquhar Oliver, leader of the Ontario Liberal Party, introduced a motion that the assembly refuse to accept the resignation of Stewart but this motion was ruled out of order.<ref name=bio/>
Backbencher and committee member
Stewart became a backbencher and went on to serve on various committees, serving as Chairman of the Select Committee on Reform Institutions from 1953 to 1955.<ref name="OLA Bio"/> Stewart served until 1948 when he lost to CCF candidate Lloyd Fell. He regained his seat in the 1951 provincial election.<ref name=bio/> He remained a member of the legislature until the 1959 election when his Parkdale seat was won by Liberal James Trotter and he left politics.<ref name="OLA Bio"/>
Life after politics
He served briefly as a member of the Ontario Parole Board in 1960 but found the position too strenuous. Stewart was named chairman of the Toronto Historical Board the following year. He died in Toronto eight years later.<ref name=bio/>
The Stewart Building on College Street bears his name.
Family connection
Stewart is the uncle of former Toronto Fire Services Chief William Albert Stewart and brother to Thomas Beamish Stewart.Template:Citation needed
References
Template:Archival records Template:Reflist
Template:TorMayors Template:Speakers of the Legislative Assembly of Ontario
- Pages with broken file links
- 1889 births
- 1969 deaths
- 20th-century mayors of places in Ontario
- Canadian Commanders of the Order of the British Empire
- Mayors of Toronto
- Progressive Conservative Party of Ontario MPPs
- Speakers of the Legislative Assembly of Ontario
- Toronto city councillors
- 20th-century members of the Legislative Assembly of Ontario