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{{Short description|Canadian politician}}
'''Gerald Grattan McGeer''' (6 January 1888 – 11 August 1947) was a lawyer, [[Populism|populist politician]], and [[monetary reform]] advocate in the [[Canada|Canadian]] province of [[British Columbia]]. He served as the 22nd Mayor of Vancouver, a Member of the Legislative Assembly in BC, Member of Parliament for the Liberal Party of Canada, and in the Canadian Senate.
{{Use Canadian English|date=September 2021}}
[[Image:GGMcGeer.jpg|right|thumb|Gerry McGeer, c. 1935.]]
{{Use dmy dates|date=September 2021}}
{{Infobox MP
| honorific-prefix =[[The Honourable]]
| name = Gerald McGeer
| honorific-suffix =
| image = GGMcGeer.jpg
| alt =
| caption = circa 1935
| office = [[Member of Parliament (Canada)|Canadian MP]] for [[Vancouver-Burrard (provincial electoral district)|Vancouver—Burrard]]
| term_start = February 6, 1936
| term_end = April 16, 1945
| predecessor = [[Wilfred Hanbury]]
| successor = [[Charles Merritt]]

| office1 = 22nd [[List of mayors of Vancouver|Mayor of Vancouver]]
| term_start1 = 1947
| term_end1 = 1947
| predecessor1 = [[Jonathan Webster Cornett|Jonathan W.Cornett]]
| successor1 = [[Charles E. Jones (politician)|Charles E. Jones]]
| term_start2 = 1935
| term_end2 = 1936
| predecessor2 = [[L. D. Taylor]]
| successor2 = [[George Clark Miller|George C. Miller]]

| office3 = [[Legislative Assembly of British Columbia|BC MLA]] for [[Vancouver-Burrard (provincial electoral district)|Vancouver-Burrard]]
| term_start3 = February 20, 1934
| term_end3 = October 1, 1935
| predecessor3 = ''District established''
| successor3 = [[John Howard Forester]]

| office4 = [[Legislative Assembly of British Columbia|BC MLA]] for [[Richmond (British Columbia provincial electoral district)|Richmond]]
| term_start4 = March 1, 1917
| term_end4 = October 23, 1920
| predecessor4 = [[Francis Lovett Carter-Cotton]]
| successor4 = [[Thomas Pearson (British Columbia politician)|Thomas Pearson]]

| prior_term =
| birth_name = Gerald Grattan McGeer
| birth_date = {{Birth date|df=yes|1888|01|06}}
| birth_place = [[Winnipeg, Manitoba]]
| death_date = {{Death date and age|df=yes|1947|08|11|1888|01|06}}
| death_place = [[Vancouver, British Columbia]]
| resting_place =
| resting_place_coordinates =
| citizenship =
| nationality = Canadian
| party = [[Liberal Party of Canada]]
| otherparty = [[Liberal Party of BC]]
| spouse = Charlotte Spencer
| partner = <!--For those with a domestic partner and not married-->
| relations =
| children =
| parents =
| residence =
| education =
| alma_mater = [[Dalhousie University]]
| occupation =
| profession =
| known_for =
| cabinet =
| committees =
| portfolio =
| religion =
| awards = <!-- For civilian awards - appears as "Awards" if |mawards= is not set -->
| blank1 =
| data1 =
| blank2 =
| data2 =
| blank3 =
| data3 =
| blank4 =
| data4 =
| blank5 =
| data5 =
| signature =
| signature_alt =
| website =
}}
'''Gerald Grattan McGeer''' (6 January 1888 – 11 August 1947) was a lawyer, [[Populism|populist politician]], and [[monetary reform]] advocate in the [[Canadians|Canadian]] province of [[British Columbia]]. He served as the 22nd Mayor of Vancouver, a Member of the Legislative Assembly in BC, Member of Parliament for the Liberal Party of Canada, and in the Canadian Senate.


==Early life==
==Early life==
Born in [[Winnipeg]], [[Manitoba]], McGeer moved with his family as a young child to Vancouver. He grew up in the [[Mount Pleasant (Vancouver)|Mount Pleasant]] neighbourhood. As a young adult, he worked in an iron foundry and was an active member in his union. Eventually he went to [[Dalhousie University]] to study law. Back in Vancouver, he married Charlotte Spencer, of the [[Spencer's (department store)|department store family]].
Born in [[Winnipeg]], [[Manitoba]], to James McGeer and his wife Emily Cooke, McGeer moved with his family as a young child to Vancouver. He grew up in the [[Mount Pleasant (Vancouver)|Mount Pleasant]] neighbourhood. As a young adult, he worked in an iron foundry and was an active member in his union. Eventually he went to [[Dalhousie University]] to study law. Back in Vancouver, he married Charlotte Spencer, of the [[Spencer's (department store)|department store family]].


==Freight rate fight==
==Freight rate fight==
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==MLA==
==MLA==
McGeer was elected to the [[British Columbia Legislature]] as candidate for the [[Liberal Party of BC|Liberal]] government of [[Thomas Dufferin Pattullo|Duff Pattullo]] in 1933. He was soon considered a maverick in his own party after McGeer became critical of the government because Pattullo did not appoint him to cabinet. According to McGeer, Pattullo led him to believe he would become the province's Attorney-General.
McGeer was elected to the [[British Columbia Legislature]] as the [[Liberal Party of BC|Liberal]] candidate for Richmond from 1916 to 1920, and later as part of the Liberal government of [[Thomas Dufferin Pattullo|Duff Pattullo]] for [[Vancouver-Burrard (provincial electoral district)|Vancouver-Burrard]] from 1933 to 1935. McGeer was considered a maverick in his own party during his second term, after he became critical of the government because Pattullo had not appointed him to cabinet. According to McGeer, Pattullo had led him to believe he would become the province's Attorney-General.


==Mayor Gerry==
==Mayor Gerry==
McGeer's most indelible mark in BC was made during his time as [[List of mayors of Vancouver|Mayor of Vancouver]]. He won the 1934 election against incumbent [[L. D. Taylor]] with the biggest margin of victory in Vancouver's civic history. He established himself in his campaign as a populist reformer, painting his opponent as outdated and corrupt, with police and [[monetary reform]] the two main pillars of his campaign. As mayor, he would not have power to implement his monetary policies, which he believed could end the depression. He was, however, able to reform the [[Vancouver Police Department|police department]] and the civic government, but it was his battles against communism that garnered him the most publicity, at least in his first year in office. Unemployed men in the federal relief camps had been organized by [[Workers' Unity League|Communist]] agitators into the [[Relief Camp Workers' Union]]. They struck on 4 April 1935 and arrived in Vancouver on boxcars shortly thereafter. The men stayed in Vancouver for two months, marching daily in protest of relief camp conditions.
McGeer's most indelible mark in BC was made during his time as [[List of mayors of Vancouver|Mayor of Vancouver]]. He won the 1934 election against incumbent [[L. D. Taylor]] with the biggest margin of victory in Vancouver's civic history. He established himself in his campaign as a populist reformer, painting his opponent as outdated and corrupt, with police and [[monetary reform]] the two main pillars of his campaign. As mayor, he would not have power to implement his monetary policies, which he believed could end the depression. He was, however, able to reform the [[Vancouver Police Department|police department]] and the civic government, but it was his battles against communism that garnered him the most publicity, at least in his first year in office. Unemployed men in the federal relief camps had been organized by [[Workers' Unity League|Communist]] agitators into the [[Relief Camp Workers' Union]]. They struck on 4 April 1935 and arrived in Vancouver on boxcars shortly thereafter. The men stayed in Vancouver for two months, marching daily in protest of relief camp conditions.


On one occasion, they entered the [[Hudson's Bay Company]] [[Department Store]] to publicize their grievances to shoppers. The police came to evict the men, and a bloody clash ensued. After that incident, the unemployed congregated at [[Victory Square (Vancouver)|Victory Square Park]], where McGeer came and read the [[Riot Act]]. The camp strikers left the city after two months to begin the [[On-to-Ottawa Trek]]. They felt they accomplished all they could in Vancouver and voted to take their grievances directly to [[Prime Minister of Canada|Prime Minister]] [[R. B. Bennett]]. Shortly before the trekkers left, another Communist-led strike broke out on the waterfront, culminating with another bloody clash that became known as the [[Battle of Ballantyne Pier]]. Gerry McGeer treated these protests not as strikes, but as an attempted [[Bolshevik]] uprising.<ref>{{cite book| last =Brown| first =Lorne| title =When Freedom was Lost: The Unemployed, the Agitator, and the State| publisher =Black Rose| year =1987| location =Montreal| isbn = 0-920057-77-2}}</ref> Although he came from a background as an iron molder and union representative, he came to be seen as an enemy of organized labour because of these events.
On one occasion, they entered the [[Hudson's Bay Company]] [[Department Store]] to publicize their grievances to shoppers. The police came to evict the men, and a bloody clash ensued. After that incident, the unemployed congregated at [[Victory Square (Vancouver)|Victory Square Park]], where McGeer came and read the [[Riot Act]]. The camp strikers left the city after two months to begin the [[On-to-Ottawa Trek]]. They felt they accomplished all they could in Vancouver and voted to take their grievances directly to [[Prime Minister of Canada|Prime Minister]] [[R. B. Bennett]]. Shortly before the trekkers left, another Communist-led strike broke out on the waterfront, culminating with another bloody clash that became known as the [[Battle of Ballantyne Pier]]. Gerry McGeer treated these protests not as strikes, but as an attempted [[Bolshevik]] uprising.<ref>{{cite book| last =Brown| first =Lorne| title =When Freedom was Lost: The Unemployed, the Agitator, and the State| url =https://archive.org/details/whenfreedomwaslo0000brow| url-access =registration| publisher =Black Rose| year =1987| location =Montreal| isbn = 0-920057-77-2}}</ref> Although he came from a background as an iron molder and union representative, he came to be seen as an enemy of organized labour because of these events.


McGeer organized elaborate celebrations to mark Vancouver's golden jubilee in 1936, which was controversial in the midst of the depression. While some applauded his efforts to boost civic pride as a positive step towards bringing back prosperity, others denounced extravagances such as a $35,000 fountain for [[Stanley Park]]'s [[Lost Lagoon]] while the city teetered on the edge of bankruptcy. McGeer is also credited with the construction of [[Vancouver City Hall]], a landmark [[Art Deco]] building funded in part by a baby bond scheme conceived by McGeer.
McGeer organized elaborate celebrations to mark Vancouver's golden jubilee in 1936, which was controversial in the midst of the depression. While some applauded his efforts to boost civic pride as a positive step towards bringing back prosperity, others denounced extravagances such as a $35,000 fountain for [[Stanley Park]]'s [[Lost Lagoon]] while the city teetered on the edge of bankruptcy. McGeer is also credited with the construction of [[Vancouver City Hall]], a landmark [[Art Deco]] building funded in part by a baby bond scheme conceived by McGeer.
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==Federal politics==
==Federal politics==
While still mayor, McGeer ran as a [[Liberal Party of Canada|Liberal Party]] candidate in the [[Canadian federal election, 1935|1935 federal election]] and won in the [[electoral district (Canada)|riding]] of [[Vancouver—Burrard]] by a thin margin. In previous attempts, McGeer suffered defeats in the federal elections of [[Canadian federal election, 1925|1925]], [[Canadian federal election, 1926|1926]], and [[Canadian federal election, 1930|1930]]. He was re-elected in [[Canadian federal election, 1940|1940]] and appointed to the [[Canadian Senate|Senate]] by [[Prime Minister of Canada|Prime Minister]] [[William Lyon Mackenzie King|Mackenzie King]] on 9 June 1945.
While still mayor, McGeer ran as a [[Liberal Party of Canada|Liberal Party]] candidate in the [[1935 Canadian federal election|1935 federal election]] and won in the [[electoral district (Canada)|riding]] of [[Vancouver-Burrard (provincial electoral district)|Vancouver—Burrard]] by a thin margin. In previous attempts, McGeer suffered defeats in the federal elections of [[1925 Canadian federal election|1925]], [[1926 Canadian federal election|1926]], and [[1930 Canadian federal election|1930]]. He was re-elected in [[1940 Canadian federal election|1940]] and appointed to the [[Senate of Canada|Senate]] by [[Prime Minister of Canada|Prime Minister]] [[William Lyon Mackenzie King|Mackenzie King]] on 9 June 1945.


Although he attained his goal of becoming elected to the federal government, McGeer was once again relegated to the back benches, this time in Mackenzie King's government. He had a warm relationship with King through much of his political career, but King did not embrace McGeer's monetary schemes and sought to keep his outlandish behaviour on the margins of the government. Despite the reservations of the political elite, McGeer was immensely popular outside those circles because of his fiery oration skills. His tirades against bankers and the banking system proved especially popular during the [[Great Depression in Canada|Great Depression]], and he regularly lectured to packed houses across the country.
Although he attained his goal of becoming elected to the federal government, McGeer was once again relegated to the back benches of Mackenzie King's government. He had a warm relationship with King through much of his political career, but King did not embrace McGeer's monetary schemes but eventually saw things his way. Despite the reservations of the political elite, McGeer was immensely popular outside those circles because of his fiery oration skills. His tirades against bankers and the banking system proved especially popular during the [[Great Depression in Canada|Great Depression]], and he regularly lectured to packed houses across the country.


==Civic comeback==
==Civic comeback==
McGeer returned to civic politics with another landslide election victory in 1946, this time on a [[Non-Partisan Association]] slate. Again he ran on a campaign to rid the city of vice and police corruption. Ill-health made him less exuberant than his earlier mayoral term, but he nonetheless persisted with his reforms. Twenty-six men on the police force were demoted or dismissed and the [[chief constable]] was replaced by Walter Mulligan, who was the youngest chief in Vancouver to date. McGeer died in office in 1947 and therefore did not see the fruits of his latest reform drive. In 1955, revelations surfaced that McGeer's chosen police chief had instituted a pay-off system in Vancouver, resulting in an extensive police inquiry. Mulligan fled the country, one high-ranking member of the force committed suicide, and another attempted suicide. Meanwhile, a Superintendent from the [[Royal Canadian Mounted Police]] took over as the new chief.<ref>{{cite book| last =Macdonald| first =Ian| coauthors =Betty O'Keefe| title =The Mulligan Affair: Top Cop on the Take| publisher =Heritage House| year =1997|location =Vancouver|isbn = 1-895811-45-7}}</ref>
McGeer returned to civic politics with another landslide election victory in 1946, this time on a [[Non-Partisan Association]] slate. Again he ran on a campaign to rid the city of vice and police corruption. Ill-health made him less exuberant than his earlier mayoral term, but he nonetheless persisted with his reforms. Twenty-six men on the police force were demoted or dismissed and the [[chief constable]] was replaced by Walter Mulligan, who was the youngest chief in Vancouver to date. McGeer died in office in 1947 and therefore did not see the fruits of his latest reform drive. In 1955, revelations surfaced that McGeer's chosen police chief had instituted a pay-off system in Vancouver, resulting in an extensive police inquiry. Mulligan fled the country, one high-ranking member of the force committed suicide, and another attempted suicide. Meanwhile, a Superintendent from the [[Royal Canadian Mounted Police]] took over as the new chief.<ref>{{cite book| last =Macdonald| first =Ian|author2=Betty O'Keefe| title =The Mulligan Affair: Top Cop on the Take| url =https://archive.org/details/mulliganaffairto0000macd| url-access =registration| publisher =Heritage House| year =1997|location =Vancouver|isbn = 1-895811-45-7}}</ref>


==Legacy==
==Legacy==
McGeer's monetary reform ideas were certainly his greatest passion. Although his attempts to obtain a position where he could implement his ideas failed, his was one of the most forceful voices in Canada advocating government intervention in the monetary system and nationalizing the credit system. His vision of monetary reform predated the establishment of the [[Bank of Canada]] and the [[Social Credit]] movement of [[William Aberhart]], which formed the government in [[Alberta]] and later in BC under an admirer of McGeer, [[W. A. C. Bennett]]. Although McGeer was critical of Aberhart's version of Social Credit, he did flirt with the [[British Columbia Social Credit Party]] before his death, leading his biographer to speculate that McGeer likely would have been a player in the Bennett government, which enjoyed a twenty-year reign of the province.
McGeer's monetary reform ideas were certainly his greatest passion and achievement. His was one of the most forceful voices in Canada advocating government intervention in the usurious British monetary system and nationalizing the Bank of Canada.


Gerald Gratton McGeer's economic ideas are most fully elaborated in his 1935 book, "The Conquest of Poverty".
McGeer's nephew, [[Pat McGeer]] was elected as an MLA for the opposition Liberals in a byelection in 1962, and reelected in the [[British Columbia general election, 1963|1963]]. Gerry McGeer's economic ideas are most fully elaborated in his 1935 book, ''Conquest of Poverty, or Money, Humanity and Christianity,'' in which the last part is in the form of an imaginary radio broadcast featuring [[President of the United States|President]] [[Franklin D. Roosevelt|Roosevelt]] interviewing Abraham Lincoln.<ref>{{cite book|last=McGeer|first=Gerry|url=http://www.heritech.com/yamaguchy/mcgeer/conq_00.html|title=Conquest of Poverty, or Money, Humanity and Christianity|year=1935|location=Gardenvale, QC|publisher=Garden City Press}}</ref>

==See also==
*[[Monetary reform]]
*[[Money creation]]


==References==
==References==
<references/>
<references/>
*David Ricardo Williams, ''Mayor Gerry: The Remarkable Gerald Grattan McGeer.'' Vancouver: Douglas and McIntyre, 1986. ISBN 0-88894-504-3
*David Ricardo Williams, ''Mayor Gerry: The Remarkable Gerald Grattan McGeer.'' Vancouver: Douglas and McIntyre, 1986. {{ISBN|0-88894-504-3}}


==External links==
==External links==
*{{Canadian Parliament links|ID=14751}}
*{{MPLinksCA|parliament=|parlinfo=1fa5151a-cf60-4833-969e-dab41c2525c1|openparl=|vote=}}

{{s-start}}
{{s-par|ca}}
{{succession box|title=[[Vancouver—Burrard|Member of Parliament for Vancouver—Burrard]]|
before=[[Wilfred Hanbury]]|
after=[[Charles Merritt]]|
years=1935-1945}}
{{s-end}}


{{Mayors of Vancouver}}
{{Mayors of Vancouver}}


{{Authority control|VIAF=23615498}}
{{Authority control}}

{{Persondata
| NAME = McGeer, Gerry
| ALTERNATIVE NAMES =
| SHORT DESCRIPTION = Canadian politician
| DATE OF BIRTH = 6 January 1888
| PLACE OF BIRTH =
| DATE OF DEATH = 11 August 1947
| PLACE OF DEATH =
}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:McGeer, Gerry}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:McGeer, Gerry}}
[[Category:1888 births]]
[[Category:1888 births]]
[[Category:1947 deaths]]
[[Category:1947 deaths]]
[[Category:British Columbia Liberal Party MLAs]]
[[Category:BC United MLAs]]
[[Category:Canadian anti-communists]]
[[Category:Canadian anti-communists]]
[[Category:Canadian senators from British Columbia]]
[[Category:Canadian senators from British Columbia]]
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[[Category:Members of the House of Commons of Canada from British Columbia]]
[[Category:Members of the House of Commons of Canada from British Columbia]]
[[Category:Monetary reformers]]
[[Category:Monetary reformers]]
[[Category:People from Vancouver]]
[[Category:Politicians from Winnipeg]]
[[Category:People from Winnipeg]]
[[Category:20th-century Canadian politicians]]

Latest revision as of 09:37, 11 May 2024

Gerald McGeer
circa 1935
Canadian MP for Vancouver—Burrard
In office
February 6, 1936 – April 16, 1945
Preceded byWilfred Hanbury
Succeeded byCharles Merritt
22nd Mayor of Vancouver
In office
1947–1947
Preceded byJonathan W.Cornett
Succeeded byCharles E. Jones
In office
1935–1936
Preceded byL. D. Taylor
Succeeded byGeorge C. Miller
BC MLA for Vancouver-Burrard
In office
February 20, 1934 – October 1, 1935
Preceded byDistrict established
Succeeded byJohn Howard Forester
BC MLA for Richmond
In office
March 1, 1917 – October 23, 1920
Preceded byFrancis Lovett Carter-Cotton
Succeeded byThomas Pearson
Personal details
Born
Gerald Grattan McGeer

(1888-01-06)6 January 1888
Winnipeg, Manitoba
Died11 August 1947(1947-08-11) (aged 59)
Vancouver, British Columbia
NationalityCanadian
Political partyLiberal Party of Canada
Other political
affiliations
Liberal Party of BC
SpouseCharlotte Spencer
Alma materDalhousie University

Gerald Grattan McGeer (6 January 1888 – 11 August 1947) was a lawyer, populist politician, and monetary reform advocate in the Canadian province of British Columbia. He served as the 22nd Mayor of Vancouver, a Member of the Legislative Assembly in BC, Member of Parliament for the Liberal Party of Canada, and in the Canadian Senate.

Early life[edit]

Born in Winnipeg, Manitoba, to James McGeer and his wife Emily Cooke, McGeer moved with his family as a young child to Vancouver. He grew up in the Mount Pleasant neighbourhood. As a young adult, he worked in an iron foundry and was an active member in his union. Eventually he went to Dalhousie University to study law. Back in Vancouver, he married Charlotte Spencer, of the department store family.

Freight rate fight[edit]

McGeer first attained renown in the 1920s as a lawyer representing the British Columbia government in its case to reduce freight rate differentials on goods shipped through the Rocky Mountains by rail. He worked for years on this case and achieved considerable success. The outcome proved a windfall for the BC economy, earning McGeer a reputation as "the man who flattened the Rockies." Reductions in discriminatory freight rates made it economically feasible for prairie grain to come west and be exported through Vancouver's port rather than seaports in eastern Canada and the United States.

MLA[edit]

McGeer was elected to the British Columbia Legislature as the Liberal candidate for Richmond from 1916 to 1920, and later as part of the Liberal government of Duff Pattullo for Vancouver-Burrard from 1933 to 1935. McGeer was considered a maverick in his own party during his second term, after he became critical of the government because Pattullo had not appointed him to cabinet. According to McGeer, Pattullo had led him to believe he would become the province's Attorney-General.

Mayor Gerry[edit]

McGeer's most indelible mark in BC was made during his time as Mayor of Vancouver. He won the 1934 election against incumbent L. D. Taylor with the biggest margin of victory in Vancouver's civic history. He established himself in his campaign as a populist reformer, painting his opponent as outdated and corrupt, with police and monetary reform the two main pillars of his campaign. As mayor, he would not have power to implement his monetary policies, which he believed could end the depression. He was, however, able to reform the police department and the civic government, but it was his battles against communism that garnered him the most publicity, at least in his first year in office. Unemployed men in the federal relief camps had been organized by Communist agitators into the Relief Camp Workers' Union. They struck on 4 April 1935 and arrived in Vancouver on boxcars shortly thereafter. The men stayed in Vancouver for two months, marching daily in protest of relief camp conditions.

On one occasion, they entered the Hudson's Bay Company Department Store to publicize their grievances to shoppers. The police came to evict the men, and a bloody clash ensued. After that incident, the unemployed congregated at Victory Square Park, where McGeer came and read the Riot Act. The camp strikers left the city after two months to begin the On-to-Ottawa Trek. They felt they accomplished all they could in Vancouver and voted to take their grievances directly to Prime Minister R. B. Bennett. Shortly before the trekkers left, another Communist-led strike broke out on the waterfront, culminating with another bloody clash that became known as the Battle of Ballantyne Pier. Gerry McGeer treated these protests not as strikes, but as an attempted Bolshevik uprising.[1] Although he came from a background as an iron molder and union representative, he came to be seen as an enemy of organized labour because of these events.

McGeer organized elaborate celebrations to mark Vancouver's golden jubilee in 1936, which was controversial in the midst of the depression. While some applauded his efforts to boost civic pride as a positive step towards bringing back prosperity, others denounced extravagances such as a $35,000 fountain for Stanley Park's Lost Lagoon while the city teetered on the edge of bankruptcy. McGeer is also credited with the construction of Vancouver City Hall, a landmark Art Deco building funded in part by a baby bond scheme conceived by McGeer.

Monetary reform[edit]

In the early part of the Great Depression, McGeer became a zealous student of economics and soon became obsessed with monetary reform as the answer to the economic crisis. He eventually came up with his own theories, which he cobbled together from the work of John Maynard Keynes, Abraham Lincoln, and the Bible. (Williams, 312) On one occasion, he hypothesized that international "money power" was financing Communists activities in Vancouver. Another time he testified before the government that Abraham Lincoln was assassinated by international bankers opposed to the introduction of "Greenbacks." McGeer's lifelong mission was to attain a position where he could implement his reform ideas, but his flamboyant, aggressive, and eccentric style and theories alienated the powerbrokers in his own party.

Federal politics[edit]

While still mayor, McGeer ran as a Liberal Party candidate in the 1935 federal election and won in the riding of Vancouver—Burrard by a thin margin. In previous attempts, McGeer suffered defeats in the federal elections of 1925, 1926, and 1930. He was re-elected in 1940 and appointed to the Senate by Prime Minister Mackenzie King on 9 June 1945.

Although he attained his goal of becoming elected to the federal government, McGeer was once again relegated to the back benches of Mackenzie King's government. He had a warm relationship with King through much of his political career, but King did not embrace McGeer's monetary schemes but eventually saw things his way. Despite the reservations of the political elite, McGeer was immensely popular outside those circles because of his fiery oration skills. His tirades against bankers and the banking system proved especially popular during the Great Depression, and he regularly lectured to packed houses across the country.

Civic comeback[edit]

McGeer returned to civic politics with another landslide election victory in 1946, this time on a Non-Partisan Association slate. Again he ran on a campaign to rid the city of vice and police corruption. Ill-health made him less exuberant than his earlier mayoral term, but he nonetheless persisted with his reforms. Twenty-six men on the police force were demoted or dismissed and the chief constable was replaced by Walter Mulligan, who was the youngest chief in Vancouver to date. McGeer died in office in 1947 and therefore did not see the fruits of his latest reform drive. In 1955, revelations surfaced that McGeer's chosen police chief had instituted a pay-off system in Vancouver, resulting in an extensive police inquiry. Mulligan fled the country, one high-ranking member of the force committed suicide, and another attempted suicide. Meanwhile, a Superintendent from the Royal Canadian Mounted Police took over as the new chief.[2]

Legacy[edit]

McGeer's monetary reform ideas were certainly his greatest passion and achievement. His was one of the most forceful voices in Canada advocating government intervention in the usurious British monetary system and nationalizing the Bank of Canada.

Gerald Gratton McGeer's economic ideas are most fully elaborated in his 1935 book, "The Conquest of Poverty".

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Brown, Lorne (1987). When Freedom was Lost: The Unemployed, the Agitator, and the State. Montreal: Black Rose. ISBN 0-920057-77-2.
  2. ^ Macdonald, Ian; Betty O'Keefe (1997). The Mulligan Affair: Top Cop on the Take. Vancouver: Heritage House. ISBN 1-895811-45-7.
  • David Ricardo Williams, Mayor Gerry: The Remarkable Gerald Grattan McGeer. Vancouver: Douglas and McIntyre, 1986. ISBN 0-88894-504-3

External links[edit]