THOMPSON, Joseph Elijah

- Born
- 1867-07-19
Toronto, Ontario - Died
- 1941-03-16
Toronto, Ontario - Role
- Speaker of the Legislative Assembly of Ontario, 1924–1926; MPP for Toronto Northeast and St. David; Canadian Expeditionary Force officer
Joseph Elijah Thompson rose through Toronto City Hall as a clerk, built an insurance brokerage, took a captain’s commission with the Canadian Expeditionary Force, and sat in the Ontario Legislature for a decade. He held the Speaker’s chair at Queen’s Park from 1924 to 1926 and chaired the 1920 Ontario Conservative leadership convention that chose Howard Ferguson.
Early life
Thompson was born in Toronto on 19 July 1867 and grew up in Cabbagetown, the working-class district east of Parliament Street. His first regular employment came in 1889, as a clerk in the City of Toronto Treasurer’s office. He stayed there nearly two decades and was appointed the city’s Commissioner of Industry and Publicity in 1907, a new office charged with promoting Toronto as a manufacturing centre. He left the role in 1908 to open his own insurance brokerage.
Orange Order
Thompson joined Medcalf L.O.L. No. 781, named for Francis Henry Medcalf, the Irish-born foundryman who had served as Toronto’s first County Master. Thompson himself was elected County Master of Toronto for 1907 and 1908, coincident with his years heading the city’s publicity office. The appointment to County Master placed him at the head of the largest Orange jurisdiction in Canada and established the political base he would draw on a decade later.
City Hall and war service
His first elected office came in 1915, when he won a seat on Toronto’s Board of Control. He was a sitting controller when he volunteered for the Canadian Expeditionary Force and took a captain’s commission. His CEF service carried him through the last year of the fighting and into the post-Armistice Allied garrison in occupied Germany. Discharged in 1919, he came back to Toronto and picked up his brokerage and his civic career where he had left them.
Provincial politics
Thompson contested the 1919 provincial election in Toronto Northeast and took the seat for the Conservatives. The party as a whole lost that contest to the United Farmers of Ontario under E. C. Drury, but Thompson arrived at Queen’s Park with a safe urban riding and enough caucus standing that when the Legislature opened in March 1920 he was named Conservative Party whip. From that chair he presided over the Ontario Conservatives’ 1920 leadership convention, which chose Howard Ferguson.
A second election in 1923 returned him to the same seat, the year Ferguson carried the party back to government. In February 1924 the House chose him Speaker of the Legislative Assembly. He held the Speaker’s chair through two sessions and stepped down from it in 1926. The Conservatives then ran him in the riding of St. David, in east-central downtown Toronto; he won it by a wide margin. He chose not to stand again in the 1929 campaign and left provincial politics after a decade in the House.
Death
Thompson died in Toronto on 16 March 1941, at the age of seventy-three.
Sources
- Joseph Thompson (Canadian politician) — Wikipedia — Biographical overview with links to Canadian Parliamentary Guide citations.
- Legislative Assembly of Ontario — Members' roster — Authoritative source for Ontario MPP electoral history, ridings, and dates of service.
- Canadian Parliamentary Guide (annual, various editions 1920–1929) — Verified federal and provincial member biographical entries during Thompson's career.
Further reading
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- The Sash Canada Wore: A Historical Geography of the Orange Order in Canada — Houston & Smyth. University of Toronto Press, 1980. Broader setting for Thompson's Toronto Orange network.
- Toronto, the Belfast of Canada: The Orange Order and the Shaping of Municipal Culture — William J. Smyth. University of Toronto Press, 2015.