Charles Richmond Mitchell
{{Short description|Canadian politician (1872–1942)}}
{{for|persons of a similar name|Charles Mitchell (disambiguation)}}
{{Use Canadian English|date=January 2023}}
{{Infobox officeholder
|name = Charles Richmond Mitchell
|image = Charles Richmond Mitchell.jpg
|alt =
|caption =
| title=Leader of the Official Opposition in Alberta
| term_start=February 19, 1925
| term_end=March 12, 1926
| predecessor=John Robert Boyle
| successor=John C. Bowen
|office1 = Alberta Minister of Health
|term_start1 = April 29, 1920
|term_end1 = August 13, 1921
|predecessor1 = Alexander Grant MacKay
|successor1 = Richard Gavin Reid
|office2 = Alberta Minister of Municipal Affairs
|term_start2 = April 29, 1920
|term_end2 = August 13, 1921
|predecessor2 = Alexander Grant MacKay
|successor2 = Richard Gavin Reid
|office3 = Alberta Provincial Treasurer
|term_start3 = November 28, 1913
|term_end3 = August 13, 1921
|predecessor3 = Arthur Sifton
|successor3 = Herbert Greenfield
|office4 = Alberta Minister of Public Works
|term_start4 = May 4, 1912
|term_end4 = November 28, 1913
|predecessor4 = Arthur Sifton
|successor4 = Charles Stewart
|office5 = Alberta Minister of Education
|term_start5 = June 1, 1910
|term_end5 = May 4, 1912
|predecessor5 = Alexander Cameron Rutherford
|successor5 = John Robert Boyle
|office6 = Attorney-General of Alberta
|term_start6 = June 1, 1910
|term_end6 = May 4, 1912
|predecessor6 = Charles Wilson Cross
|successor6 = Charles Wilson Cross
|office7 = Member of the Legislative Assembly of Alberta
|term_start7 = June 12, 1913
|term_end7 = March 18, 1926
|predecessor7 = George Lane
|successor7 = Joseph Tweed Shaw
|constituency7 = Bow Valley
|term_start8 = June 29, 1910
|term_end8 = April 17, 1913
|predecessor8 = William Thomas Finlay
|successor8 = Nelson Spencer
|constituency8 = Medicine Hat
|birth_date = November 20, 1872
|birth_place = Newcastle, New Brunswick, Canada
|death_date = August 16, 1942 (aged 69)
|death_place = Edmonton, Alberta, Canada
|party = Liberal
|spouse =
|relations = Peter Mitchell (uncle)
|children =
|alma_mater = University of New Brunswick
King's College
|profession = Lawyer
|religion =
}}
Charles Richmond Mitchell (November 30, 1872 – August 16, 1942) was a Canadian lawyer, judge, cabinet minister and former Leader of the Official Opposition in the Legislative Assembly of Alberta.
Early life
Mitchell was born in Newcastle, New Brunswick. At the time, the Mitchells were a prominent local family: Mitchell's father was the Sheriff of Northumberland County and his uncle was Peter Mitchell, a senator and later Premier of New Brunswick.
He went to the University of New Brunswick and King's College and took the New Brunswick bar exam in 1897. The next year he moved to Medicine Hat, at that time in the Northwest Territories, and opened a thriving legal practice. He was appointed as a Judge in 1907 for the Calgary District Court.
Cabinet minister
{{More citations needed section|date=September 2022}}
A Liberal politician, Mitchell was first elected as a Member of the Legislative Assembly in a by-election in Medicine Hat provincial electoral district on June 29, 1910, after Premier Arthur L.W. Sifton appointed him to the cabinet on June 1.
Mitchell held two cabinet portfolios as the Minister of Education and the Attorney General of the province. He would serve both portfolios for 2 years until he became Minister of Public Works on May 4, 1912, and dropped the others. In the 1913 Alberta general election Mitchell lost his seat to Nelson Spencer from the Conservative Party. Mitchell was the only Cabinet minister defeated that election, but his was one of a few high-profile defeats across the province.
After his defeat in the 1913 general election, George Lane, the MLA for Bow Valley, resigned to provide a seat for Minister Mitchell. On June 12, 1913, he was acclaimed and again rejoined the government. He would serve Bow Valley as its MLA until his resignation in 1926.
Mitchell was reappointed to the Sifton Cabinet as the provincial Treasurer on November 28, 1913. He became the first Treasurer in Alberta history not to serve simultaneously as premier. He held that position until the United Farmers of Alberta defeated the government in 1921.
On April 29, 1920, Mitchell was appointed to be Minister of Municipal Affairs, in addition to being the Treasurer.
Defeat of government
Mitchell was one of the few Liberal Party members to survive the defeat of the government in 1921. After John Robert Boyle resigned to take a judicial position on October 27, 1924, Mitchell became the fifth leader of the Liberal Party of Alberta. He would serve as Leader of the Official Opposition until he was appointed in 1926 as a Justice to the Supreme Court of Alberta Appellate Division, when he vacated his seat and position as Liberal leader. He resigned not long before the 1926 provincial election, which the UFA won with an increased majority.
He retired from the judiciary in 1936.
Death
Mitchell died in 1942 in Edmonton, Alberta.
Electoral record
=1910 by-election=
{{Alberta provincial by-election, June 29, 1910/Medicine Hat}}
=1913 general election=
{{Alberta provincial election, 1913/Medicine Hat}}
{{Alberta provincial by-election, June 12, 1913/Bow Valley}}
{{Alberta provincial election, 1917/Bow Valley}}
{{Alberta provincial election, 1921/Bow Valley}}
Notes
{{reflist}}
References
- {{cite book |last=Mittelstadt |first=David |title=Foundations of justice: Alberta's historic courthouses |publisher=University of Calgary Press |location=Calgary |year=2005 |isbn=1-55238-123-4}}
{{ABLOpp}}
{{Alberta Liberal Party}}
{{authority control}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Mitchell, Charles R.}}
Category:Calgary city councillors
Category:Leaders of the Alberta Liberal Party
Category:People from Medicine Hat
Category:People from Miramichi, New Brunswick
Category:University of New Brunswick alumni
Category:Members of the Executive Council of Alberta
Category:University of New Brunswick Faculty of Law alumni
Category:Alberta Liberal Party MLAs
Category:20th-century members of the Legislative Assembly of Alberta