Henri-Edgar Lavigueur Politician

Henri-Edgar Lavigueur (16 February 1867 – 29 October 1943) was a Liberal party member of the Canadian House of Commons and served as alderman and Mayor of Quebec City where he was born.Lavigueur was a merchant by career, a co-founder of the Lavigueur and Hutchison company which sold sewing machines and musical instruments.In 1906, Lavigueur was elected an alderman for the Saint-Jean-Baptiste ward. In 1916, he became the city's Mayor and remained in that position until 1920.Lavigueur entered national politics in 1917 federal election with his election to Parliament at the Quebec County riding as a Laurier Liberal. He was re-elected there in the 1921 election with his party membership becoming the traditional Liberal party designation. In the 1925, 1926 and 1930 elections, he was re-elected at the Québec—Montmorency riding.Having left federal politics at the end of his term in the 16th Canadian Parliament, Lavigueur already returned for further terms as Quebec City's mayor. He remained mayor until 1934, during which he chaired the centennial of the city's 1833 constitution.

Personal facts

Henri-Edgar Lavigueur
Birth dateFebruary 16, 1867
Birth place
Quebec City , Canada , Quebec
Date of deathOctober 29, 1943

Search

Member of parliament

successor

Politician

party
Liberal Party of Canada

Henri-Edgar Lavigueur on Wikipedia

External resources

  1. http://bilan.usherbrooke.ca/bilan/pages/biographies/794.html
  2. http://ville.quebec.qc.ca/fr/ma_ville/toponymie/rues/lavigueur.shtml