Part II
10th - 15th Parliaments (1905 - 1926)
This post is the second in a series dealing with mail from the House of Commons. In this part, mail from the 10th to 15th Parliaments (1905 - 1926) is shown.
During this period, the House of Commons sat in three different buildings:
1. Original Parliament Building : 1867 - 1916
In 1857, Ottawa was chosen as the permanent capital of the Province of Canada. The Parliament Building constructed for the province became the Parliament Building of the Dominion of Canada in 1867.

Parliament Hill circa 1895

House of Commons before 1916
On February 3, 1916, the Parliament Buildings caught fire. With the exception of the Library of Parliament, the Centre Block of the Parliament Buildings was destroyed and seven people died.

2. Victoria Memorial Museum: 1916 - 1920

The newly completed Victoria Memorial Museum was chosen as the temporary parliament building. The House of Commons met in the museum auditorium and one of the exhibition halls was prepared for the Senate.

Opening session of the House of Commons at the Victoria Memorial Museum after the Parliament Buildings fire of 1916.
3. Rebuilt Parliament Building: 1920 - present

Rebuilt Parliament Building
The first parliament sat in the new building on February 26th, 1920. The Duke of Devonshire, Governor General, opened the 4th Session of the 13th Parliament in the newly rebuilt Centre Block on Parliament Hill. The ceremony was exceptional because it took place in the House of Commons, rather than the Senate, which had not yet been constructed.

Rebuilt House of Commons, 17th Parliament (1930-35)
10th Parliament : January 11, 1905 - Sept. 17, 1908
Prime Minister : Sir Wilfred Laurier
William Mulock

William Mulock (1844 - 1944) was born in Bond Head where his father practised medicine. He graduated from the University of Toronto 1863 and was called to the Bar in 1867. Mulock served his Alma Mater successfully as Senator and Vice-Chancellor 1873-1900 and became Chancellor in 1924. First elected to the House of Commons in 1882, he was Postmaster General in the Laurier cabinet 1896-1905. There he introduced Imperial penny postage, the trans-Pacific cable and far-reaching labour legislation. Knighted in 1902, Sir William was Chief Justice of Ontario 1923-1926.


William Mulok to Hamilton, April 15, 1905

Mulok celebrating his 100th birthday with protégé Prime Minister William Lyon Mackenzie King 1944
William Foster Cockshutt


William Foster Cockshutt

William Foster Cockshutt to Brantford, March 12, 1908

Sir John A. Macdonald statue
Sergeant-At-Arms : Henry Robert Smith
The Sergeant-at-Arms performs many ceremonial and administrative duties and, as a commissioner of oaths, is one of the officers who may administer the oath of allegiance to newly elected Members. Bearing the Mace, the Sergeant-at-Arms precedes the Speaker as he or she enters and leaves the Chamber each day. The Sergeant-at-Arms occupies a desk at the Bar of the House when the House is sitting. In accordance with the Standing Orders, the Sergeant-at-Arms preserves order in the galleries, lobbies, and corridors and is responsible for taking into custody strangers who misbehave in the galleries. Traditionally, the position has been held by military officers.
Lt. Colonel Henry Robert Smith (1843-1927) was the Sergeant-at-Arms from 1892 to 1918.

Henry Smith
Sergeant-at-Arms

Napoleon Antoine Belcourt


Napoleon-Antoine Belcourt

Napoleon-Antoine Belcourt to New York, June 7, 1904
Joseph Adelard Dubeau


Joseph Adelard Dubeau

House of Commons to Brooklyn, March 21, 1903

11th Parliament : January 20, 1909 - July 20, 1911
Prime Minister : Sir Wilfred Laurier
Arthur Cyril Boyce
Arthur Cyril Boyce (1867-1942) was the Conservative Member of Parliament from 1905 to 1917.

Arthur Cyril Boyce

Arthur Cyril Boyce to Toronto, March 11, 1910
12th Parliament : November 15, 1911 - Sept. 6, 1917
Prime Minister : Sir Robert Borden
Pierre Blondin


Pierre Blondin

Pierre Blondin to St. Jerome, May 12, 1913
Charles-Avila Wilson
Charles-Avila Wilson (1869 – 1936) was a lawyer, politician, and judge. Wilson was elected to the House of Commons the for the electoral district of Laval in the 1908 federal election. A Liberal, he was re-elected in 1911. He was later appointed a judge.


Charles-Avila Wilson

Charles-Avila Wilson to Toronto, May 14, 1914
Registered letter
13th Parliament: March 18, 1918 - October 4, 1921
Prime Minister : Sir Robert Borden
Robert King Anderson

Robert King Anderson

Robert King Anderson to Peterborough, March 2, 1918
John Wesley Brien


John Wesley Brien

John Wesley Brien to Walkerville, October 4, 1919
Gustave Boyer
Gustave Boyer (1871-1927) was official lecturer on agriculture in the Province of Quebec and contributed on agricultural questions for the La Patrie and Le Canada. He was the Member of Parliament for the riding of Vaudreuil from 1904 to 1922. In 1922, Boyer was appointed to the Senate representing the senatorial division of Rigau until his death in 1927.


Gustave Boyer

Gustave Boyer to St-Hyacinthe, April 1, 1919
Horatio Hochen

Horatio Hochen

Horatio Hochen to Walkerville, June 22, 1920
Jean-Joseph Denis
Jean-Joseph Denis (1876-1960) represented Joliette in the House of Commons from 1917 to 1928 as a Liberal. He resigned his seat in the House of Commons 1928 after he was named puisne judge in the Quebec Superior Court.

Jean-Joseph Denis

Jean-Joseph Denis to Montreal, June 19, 1919
William Barton Northrup: Clerk of the House of Commons
William Barton Northrup was the Conservative Member of Parliament for the Ontario riding of Hastings East serving from 1892- 1896, and 1900 - 1917. From 1918 to 1924, he was the Clerk of the House of Commons.


William Barton Northrup Clerk of the House of Commons

Ottawa to Toronto, August 21, 1919
"J.K.F." franking
Herbert Macdonald Mowat

A longtime member of the Canadian Militia, he was not accepted for overseas service during World War I. Instead, he acted a military recruiter serving as Brigade Major of the 3rd and 8th Infantry Brigade at Camp Borden.

Herbert Macdonald Mowatt

Charles Arthur Gauvreau
Charles Arthur Gauvreau was the author of Captive et Bourreau, Les épreuves d'un orphelin, and Histoire de Trois-Pistoles. He was the Member of Parliament for the riding of Temiscouata from 1897 to 1924.


Charles Arthur Gauvreau

Charles Arthur Gauvreau to Minneapolis, June 3, 1919
14th Parliament: March 8, 1922 - September 5, 1925
Prime Minister : William Lyon Mackenzie King
William Anderson Black

William Anderson Black

William Anderson Black to Derby, Vt., March 31, 1924

William Anderson Black to Halifax, March 24, 1924
15th Parliament: January 7, 1926 - July 2, 1926
Prime Minister : Arthur Meighen
Murray MacLaren

Murray MacLaren

Murray MacLaren to Liverpool, March 26, 1926