George Halsey Perley

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The Right Honourable
Sir George Halsey Perley
KCMG, PC
GeorgePerley23.jpg
Secretary of State of Canada
In office
29 June 1926 – 24 September 1926
Prime Minister Arthur Meighen
Preceded by Ernest Lapointe
Succeeded by Fernand Rinfret
Canadian High Commissioner to the United Kingdom
In office
4 August 1914 – 1922
Preceded by Donald Alexander Smith
Succeeded by Peter C. Larkin
Minister of the Overseas Military Forces
In office
31 October 1916 – 11 October 1917
Prime Minister Robert Laird Borden
Succeeded by Albert Edward Kemp
Personal details
Born (1857-09-12)September 12, 1857
Lebanon, New Hampshire, United States
Died Script error: The function "death_date_and_age" does not exist.
Nationality American, Canadian
Political party Conservative
Spouse(s) Annie Hespeler
Alma mater Harvard University
Profession Lumber merchant

Sir George Halsey Perley, KCMG, PC (September 12, 1857 – January 4, 1938) was an American born Canadian politician and diplomat.

Early life

Born in Lebanon, New Hampshire, the son of William Goodhue Perley and Mabel E. Ticknor Stevens, Perley was educated at the Ottawa Grammar School, at St. Paul's School in Concord, New Hampshire, and at Harvard University where he graduated with a Bachelor of Arts degree in 1878. Perley became a partner in the Perley & Pattee, a lumber company in which his father was senior partner. After Perley & Pattee dissolved in 1893, Perley became head of G.H. Perley & Co which had mills at Pointe-Calumet, Quebec and vice president of the Hull Lumber Company, Ltd., which is operating largely on the upper Ottawa. For many years, Perley was vice president of the Canada Atlantic Railway Co., president of the Rideau Club and president of the Ottawa Golf Club. Along with the other heirs of his father, he donated his homestead on Wellington Street for the purpose of establishing a hospital and served as vice president of its Board of Management. In 1900, he was chairman of the Ottawa and Hull Fire Relief Fund, and distributed about $1,000,000 among the sufferers by the 1900 Hull–Ottawa fire.

Perley married Annie Hespeler in Kitchener, Ontario on 4 June 1884. Perley had two children: Mabel, born 8 July 1885 and died 13 March 1887, and Ethel Lesa, born 16 September 1888.

Politics

Perley and his wife inspecting Lt. Gen. Sir Richard Turner during World War I

He was first elected to the Canadian House of Commons as the Conservative MP for Argenteuil in 1904, having failed to defeat Mr. W. C. Edwards for the seat in Russell County during the election of 1900. Perley served as High Commissioner to the United Kingdom and Minister of the Overseas Military Forces in the World War I government of Sir Robert Borden. He did not run for re-election in the 1917 federal election in order to concentrate on his duties in London. He returned to the House of Commons in the 1925 federal election and subsequently served as Secretary of State for Canada in the short-lived 1926 government of Arthur Meighen and then as Minister without Portfolio in the government of R. B. Bennett following the 1930 federal election. He was re-elected in the 1935 federal election which also saw the defeat of Bennett's government, and remained an MP until his death in 1938.

References

Parliament of Canada
Preceded by Member of Parliament for Argenteuil
1904–1917
Succeeded by
Peter Robert McGibbon
Preceded by Member of Parliament for Argenteuil
1925–1938
Succeeded by
Georges-Henri Héon
Political offices
Preceded by Secretary of State of Canada
1926
Succeeded by
Fernand Rinfret
Diplomatic posts
Preceded by Canadian High Commissioner
to the United Kingdom of Great Britain
and Northern Ireland

1914–1922
Succeeded by
Peter Charles Larkin