- Joseph Bourret
Infobox Mayor
imagesize =
honorific-prefix = Mayor
name = Joseph Bourret
honorific-suffix =
caption =
order = 3rd Mayor of Montreal
term_start = 1842
term_end = 1844
constituency = Center
predecessor =Peter McGill
successor = James Ferrier
term_start2 = 1847
term_end2 = 1849
constituency2 = St. Antoine
predecessor2 =John Easton Mills
successor2 =Édouard-Raymond Fabre
birth_date =10 June 1802
birth_place =Rivière-du-Loup ,Lower Canada
death_date = death date and age|1859|3|5|1802|6|10
death_place =Montreal ,Lower Canada
party =
alma_mater =
spouse =
profession =lawyer ,bank er
religion =
footnotes =Joseph Bourret (
10 June 1802 –5 March 1859 ) was a 19th century Canadian lawyer, banker and politician.Bourret was educated at the Classical College at Nicolet, Quebec. After clerking for three years for his uncle, Bourret was admitted to the bar in 1823. He practiced law at his uncle's office for ten years. When his uncle died, he entered into a partnership with a well known lawyer, Toussaint Pelletier.
He was appointed to the city council by the colonial government in 1840. He was elected councilor for the Center Quarter in 1842 and the Quartier St. Antoine from 1846 until 1852. (At that time, municipal politicians often served in the provincial legislature). Bourret was the third (1842-1844) and sixth (1847-1849) mayor of
Montreal , Quebec, and served as minister of public works in the Lafontaine-Baldwin government. Bourret also served on the legislative council of Canada from 1848 until his death in 1859.Bourret was supported by
Louis-Hippolyte Lafontaine because as a moderate, he was acceptable to the rich Anglo-Saxons who formed the majority of the Montreal electorate. While Lafontaine and Bourret supportedresponsible government , they provided a more moderate option than the radicals that led theRebellions of 1837 .Bourret also worked to preserve the French-Canadian identity. In 1843, he and Ludger Duvernary restored the mutual aid organization that became the
Saint-Jean-Baptiste Society . He later served as the fifth president (1848-1849). He was also a co-founder of one of French Canada's earliest financial institutions, Banque d’Épargne de la Cité et du District de Montréal. The bank was established to serve working-class Quebecers and had the strong support of the Roman Catholic Church.During his time as mayor, Montreal was the capital of the Province of Canada (see
Union of Upper and Lower Canada ). Therefore, Bourret bestowed the Saint Anne Market Building to the Parliament of the Canadas. Bourret was instrumental in the construction of theBonsecours Market and the aqueducts into Montreal. He became an advocate for a safe water system after a cholera outbreak during his second term as mayor.Personal life
Bourret was born in Rivière-du-Loup, Quebec on
10 June 1802 to farmer Joseph Bourret and Angélique Lemaître-Bellenoix. He married Emélie Pelletier, daughter of Toussaint Pelletier and Elisabeth Lacoste in 1834. Then in 1839, he married Marie-Stéphanie Bédard, daughter of the lawyer Joseph Bédard and of Marie-Geneviève-Scholastique Hubert-Lacroix. The couple had nine children. Bourret died while working on5 March 1859 at the age of 56. The funeral services were held in the Notre-Dame Basilica. In his memory,Montreal has named Avenue BOURRET near JEWISH GENERAL HOSPITAL, cote St. Catherine. H3S 1X2. Montreal (QC)References
* [http://www2.ville.montreal.qc.ca/archives/democratie/democratie_en/expo/maires/bourret/index.shtm Biography at City of Montreal archives]
* [http://www.assnat.qc.ca/fra/Membres/notices/b/BOURJ.htm Biography from the National Assembly of Quebec]
* Desrochers, Luc. "Bourret est devenu maire grâce à l'influence de La Fontaine." "La Presse". 19 Jan 1992, p. A6.
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