William Horace Temple

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William H. Temple
File:William H.l Temple CU 1948.jpg
Bill Temple at his campaign victory party in 1948.
Member of Provincial Parliament
In office
1948–1951
Preceded by George Drew
Succeeded by Alfred Hozack Cowling
Constituency High Park
Personal details
Born (1898-11-28)November 28, 1898
Montreal, Quebec
Died Script error: The function "death_date_and_age" does not exist.
Toronto, Ontario
Political party Co-operative Commonwealth Federation/New Democratic Party
Spouse(s) Mary Temple
Children Phyllis and William Jr.[1]
Residence Toronto, Ontario
Occupation Businessman
Religion United Church of Canada
Military service
Nickname(s) Temperance Bill
Allegiance Canada
Service/branch Royal Canadian Air Force
Years of service 1942–1945
Rank Flying Officer
Battles/wars Battle of the Atlantic
War World War I
Allegiance Britain
Branch Royal Naval Air Service
Service Years 1916-1918
Rank Flying Officer

William Horace (Bill) Temple (November 28, 1898 – April 9, 1988), nicknamed "Temperance Bill" or "Temperance Willie", was a Canadian democratic socialist politician, trade union activist, businessman and temperance crusader. As a youth he worked for the railway. During World War I, and World War II he was a soldier in the Royal Naval Air Service and the Royal Canadian Air Force. Between the wars, he was a salesman, and then he started a clothing import business. He became a socialist during this period, and joined the Co-operative Commonwealth Federation (CCF) when it was formed. He ran for political office many times for the CCF, both federally and provincially. The highlight of his political career was in 1948, when he defeated the incumbent premier of Ontario George Drew in his own legislative seat, in the electoral district of High Park, even though the premier's party won the general election with a majority government. His tenure was relatively short, serving only one term, and was defeated in the 1951 provincial election, and went back into the clothing import business. In his later years, he successfully led the political fight to maintain the prohibition on selling alcohol in Toronto's west-end, winning three referenda in the 1960s, 1970s and 1980s. He died in the spring of 1988, a few months before another referendum on lifting the restrictions on alcohol in the area was again defeated, his "last" victory.

Early life

Temple was born in Montreal in 1898,[2] and was one of five children.[1] His father was a railway conductor, and the family moved with him to Toronto in 1909.[1] After completing grade 8, due in part to his father's alcoholism, he took a job as an office boy with the Grand Trunk Railway for $5 a week.[1][3]

Military career

At the age of 17 Temple went to fight in World War I, joining the Royal Navy Air Service as a fighter pilot before transferring to the Royal Air Force, where he destroyed three Royal Air Force planes and no enemy ones.[1] In 1942, during World War II, he was a flying officer on intelligence operations for the Royal Canadian Air Force stationed in Sydney, Nova Scotia and Gander, Newfoundland.[1][3][4]

Young adulthood

After World War I, Temple was treated as a war hero by his employer.[5] The Arrow Shirt Company president met Temple's train in Montreal, where he promoted him to travelling salesman for the company's Winnipeg office.[5]

It was in Winnipeg where Temple – who had been a staunch Conservative, supporting Prime Ministers Sir Robert Borden and Arthur Meighan – was captivated by the speeches of local socialist clergyman and politician J.S. Woodsworth, and became a socialist in 1921.[3][5][6] Temple would regularly encounter Woodsworth, then a member of parliament in Ottawa, on train trips for his sales job.[5] Arrow moved him and his wife Mary to Regina, Saskatchewan where he met Major James Coldwell, who at the time, was the principal at the school that she taught at.[7] Coldwell was the leader of the Independent Labour party (ILP), and Temple would drive him to political rallies and events during this period.[7] Another important socialist figure that he met at this time, was Clarence Fines, an assistant principal at Coldwell's school.[7] They would go door-to-door to raise money for the ILP.[7] Fines would later become the finance minister in Tommy Douglas's Saskatchewan government during the 1940s and 1950s. Temple joined the Co-operative Commonwealth Federation (CCF) when it was formed by Woodsworth and his followers in 1932.[3]

Great Depression

When Temple was transferred by Arrow to Kitchener, Ontario in 1933, he became president of the local CCF organization.[7] His employer disapproved of Temple's socialist activism and told him to choose between politics and his job.[8] Temple chose politics, putting himself out of work when the Depression was at its worst.[3][6] Temple borrowed $5,000 from his sister and went to England, where he obtained samples of cashmere sweaters, Dack slacks and Burberry coats, and returned to Canada to find retail outlets. His import business continued until the war, when he enlisted in the RCAF.[3]

Political career

In 1943, Flying Officer Temple, took leave, to become the Ontario CCF's candidate in the west-end Toronto constituency of High Park in the provincial election.[1] He was narrowly defeated by George Drew, leader of the Ontario Progressive Conservative Party, by a mere 400 votes.[1] Drew became Premier of Ontario as a result of the election.

Temple ran in the June 1945 federal election as the CCF candidate in High Park. He placed third. Undeterred by his previous electoral defeats, he ran again in the High Park constituency, this time at the provincial level, in the 1948 Ontario election.[9] Temple castigated Drew for softening Ontario's liquor laws, claiming the Premier was the captive of "liquor interests" due to the government's decision to allow liquor sales in cocktail bars.[9] While Drew's party swept to victory across the province, Drew himself was defeated by Temple, and decided to resign as premier and move to federal politics.[9][10]

He continued to hound Drew after being elected. In the fall of 1948, Drew become the leader of the federal Progressive Conservatives. He needed a seat in the federal parliament and contested a by-election in the Ottawa-area electoral district of Carleton in order to win a seat in the House of Commons.[11] The federal Co-operative Commonwealth Federation (CCF) was determined to defeat him, so they ran Eugene Forsey as their candidate.[11] Temple was brought up from Toronto to appear at a political meeting in Richmond, Ontario's Town Hall, where Forsey and Drew were speaking.[12] He accused the Tory leader of being "a tool of the liquor interests" and also made suggestions about Drew's sobriety.[11][12] Throughout the evening Drew grew more red-faced and explosive, every time Temple spoke.[11] Finally, after Drew misheard Temple calling him dishonest, the two men were restrained before they could come to physical blows with each other.[11] A riot was barely averted, and the meeting had to be terminated.[12] However, on 20 December 1948 Drew soundly defeated Forsey, and went on to sit in Parliament.[11][13]

As a Member of Provincial Parliament (MPP), Temple fought for temperance and for housing for World War II veterans. He was elected CCF Caucus chairmain shortly after he defeated Premier Drew.[9] His temperance crusades in the legislature put him at odds with the party establishment, including national secretary, David Lewis.[9] The following year, he was not re-elected Caucus Chairman.[9] Temple remained in the Ontario legislature until his defeat in the 1951 election. After his defeat, he returned to the clothing import business until his retirement in the late 1960s.[3]

Temple remained an activist in the CCF. In the early 1950s he was a leader of the "Ginger Group", a group of dissident CCFers who argued that the party's poor performance in the 1951 provincial election was due to the party moving away from taking clear socialist stands on issues and instead focussing too much on organizational issues.[14] The group opposed what they saw as the "bureaucratization" of the CCF with salaried organizers and a greater emphasis on fundraising taking the place of grassroots volunteers and political education and discussion.[14] Temple and his supporters also argued that power was being increasingly concentrated in the hands of the party executive instead of the grassroots resulting in the squelching of democratic discussion and grassroots policy development and sought to rectify this by curtailing the powers of the provincial secretary.[14] On April 12, 1952, at the 18th annual provincial convention, Temple nearly ran for leader against Ted Jolliffe but withdrew at the last minute allowing Jolliffe to be acclaimed.[15][16] Temple then ran for party president against establishment candidate Ted Isley, but was defeated 112 to 85.[17] Temple and one other member of the Ginger Group, True Davidson, were then subsequently elected to the executive as vice-presidents.[16][17]

He remained a member of the CCF's successor, the Ontario New Democratic Party, for much of his life but resigned from the NDP in 1987, stating that he "cannot possibly accept the liquor policy of the party."[6]

Temperance crusader

He acquired the nickname "Temperance Willie" while serving in the RCAF. His anti-liquor attitudes formed in his early years as a result of his father's alcoholism as well as his Methodist upbringing and experiences in the military.[4] He admitted to having a few drinks during World War I, "Of course I've had a drink, you cannot go through two world wars without taking a drink," he told the Globe and Mail but added "I think I had a few on Nov. 11, 1918, but I don't really remember having any since."[4]

After his political defeat, he remained active in West Toronto where he founded the Inter-Church Temperance League. When the community joined the city of Toronto in 1909, it did so on condition of remaining a "dry" district where alcohol sales were prohibited, as they had been since 1904.[18] Temple and his Temperance League fought for half a century to maintain that regulation despite attempts by the city to reverse it. Over the years, several plebiscites were held on allowing alcohol sales, and Temple and his supporters successfully fought against permitting alcohol sales in referendums held in 1966, 1972, 1984.[6] He died several months before a 1988 plebiscite, but had already begun the campaign, and his supporters credited him with their victory. It was not until after Temple's death that neighbourhoods in the area finally voted to allow alcohol sales beginning in 1994 in the St. Clair West area, and ending in The Junction in 2000, when the last dry region in west Toronto became wet.[19][20][21][22]

Trade unionism

Temple was also a supporter of trade union rights throughout his life, and walked on countless picket lines.[3][6] In the fall of 1973, during a strike by The Canadian Textiles and Chemical Union at Artistic Woodworking in North York, while on the picket line, he was arrested and charged with assaulting a police officer.[23] When Temple's case was brought to trial, the officer who had allegedly been assaulted (who was twice Temple's size and more than half his age) claimed in testimony that he had smelled alcohol on Temple's breath.[24] This caused more offence to Temple than the claim that he had committed an assault, and a long series of character witnesses testified that Temple had never consumed anything stronger than ginger ale as long as they had known him.[24] The charges were dismissed.[23]

Religion

Temple was raised a Methodist and was a member of the United Church of Canada, where he attended every Sunday, although in the latter years of his life he said his religious views were probably closer to the Unitarian Church.[3]

Personal life

Temple was predeceased by his son, William Price Temple; who was hospitalized for over four months, in and out of a coma, and finally succumbed to an undiagnosed brain-disease on August 21, 1956.[25][26] His wife, Mary Temple, served for a period as an alderman on the Toronto City Council for Ward 7 from 1959 to 1969, and had previously served as a school trustee for the ward.[3][4] She also served as Chair of the Toronto School Board in the 1950s.[27]

Temple died on April 9, 1988, in the Queensway General Hospital, after a short illness at the age of 89.[1]

References

Footnotes

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  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 5.3 Melnyk, p. 174
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  7. 7.0 7.1 7.2 7.3 7.4 Melnyk, p. 176
  8. Melnyk, p. 177
  9. 9.0 9.1 9.2 9.3 9.4 9.5 Melnyk, pp. 177-178
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  11. 11.0 11.1 11.2 11.3 11.4 11.5 MacDonald, p. 296-297.
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  13. Forsey, p. 99
  14. 14.0 14.1 14.2 Azoulay, pp. 33–36
  15. Azoulay, p. 40
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  17. 17.0 17.1 Azoulay, p.42
  18. Melnyk, p. 173
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  22. It took two plebiscites, one in the western part of the Junction, what is now called Ward 13, in the 1997 Toronto municipal election which passed, and a second one in the 2000 Toronto municipal election in Ward 14.
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Bibliography

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