George-Etienne Cartier: Montreal BourgeoisMcGill-Queen's Press - MQUP, 1 déc. 1981 - 196 pages Through the use of new sources, this study gives prominence to Cartier's business, social, and family milieu. It examines his emergence as a corporation lawyer, company director, landlord, and railway promoter as well as his political battles with his in-laws, his disintegrating marriage, and his long liaison with the unorthodox Luce Cuvillier. A rebel and political exile in 1837, Cartier by the 1850s was a member of the militia, a government minister, and a perennial defender of British traditions. His solid conservatism brough him support and rewards from the English-speaking bourgeoisie, the Grand Trunk Railway, and the Seminary of Montreal. After confederation, Cartier's political energies lessened, and his interest turned to his country estate and to pleasures of the table, drawing room, and stable. His degenerative disease and his alienation from his working-class voters in east-end Montreal made him vulnerable to his opponents, and his life ended in political defeat and implication in the Pacific scandal. His career, Young concludes, illustrates the development of bourgeois hegemony in Montreal after 1840 and the progressive integration of institutional, political, and economic structures to preserve that power. |
Table des matières
Origins | 1 |
Business Family and Social Position | 12 |
Working Politician | 53 |
Institutions | 86 |
Conclusion | 119 |
CHRONOLOGY | 137 |
ABBREVIATIONS | 144 |
NOTES | 145 |
BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTE | 170 |
172 | |
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abolition acted Allan Antoine April ASSM Bank Berthelot bill Bishop Bourget bourgeois bourgeoisie British brother campaign Canadian capital Catholic Chapais Collection church city's clergy clerical Collège de Montréal Confederation Conservative country estate curé Dame daughters Discours Dorion Duvernay election élite English-speaking ethnic Fabre February federal Fontaine francophone French French-Canadian George-Etienne Cartier Grand Trunk Railway Hector Langevin Histoire Hortense Cartier Hotel Ibid important institutions investment Jacques Cartier Jean Baptiste Society John Joseph Joseph Cauchon July June La Minerve Langevin Lawrence lawyer Legislative Assembly London Lower Canada Luce Cuvillier Macdonald March marriage Maurice Cuvillier McCord merchant militia Minerve Montreal Gazette Montreal-East Ottawa Papineau Paris parish party patriote political politicians Pominville provincial Quebec City rebellions religious rented Richelieu Rouges rural seigneurial tenure Seminary of Montreal September social subsidies Sulpicians tion Toronto ultramontane urban Verchères Wolfred Nelson