Ellen Louks Fairclough
Ellen Louks Fairclough
Ellen Louks Fairclough (born 1905) was Canada's first female Cabinet minister. Preferring example to preaching in advancing women's rights, she was her country's outstanding example of a woman successful as wife, mother, businesswoman, and public servant.
Born in Hamilton, Ontario, on Jan. 28, 1905, Ellen Louks was the daughter of Norman Ellsworth Cook and Nellie Bell Louks. She was educated in Hamilton public and secondary schools, graduating at the age of 16. After a brief stint as a stenographer, she became an accountant. In 1931 she married D. H. Gordon Fairclough, owner and operator of a printing company.
Attracted by Politics
Fairclough's interest in politics dated from the time she and her husband helped organize the Young Conservative Association of Hamilton. In 1935 she started her own accounting firm and continued to operate it until becoming a member of the government in 1957. After World War II she decided to seek municipal office. She was defeated in her first attempt for the office of alderman of Hamilton. However, when the sitting alderman resigned within a few months, she was elected to fill the vacant post, in which she served from 1946 to 1949. In 1950 she served as municipal controller and deputy mayor.
In 1949 in the general election Fairclough won the nomination as the Progressive Conservative candidate for a seat in the House of Commons from the constituency of Hamilton West, but she failed to unseat the incumbent. When he resigned, she won his seat in a by-election in 1950.
As the new member of the opposition party, Fairclough soon made her mark as an informed and constructive critic of the government. Representing a riding, or electoral district, in a large urban industrial city, she had a compelling interest in labor matters. In the fall of 1950, she served as a member of Canada's delegation to the United Nations. In 1951 she was named chairman of the Labour Committee of the Opposition caucus and chief spokesperson of her party on labor matters.
Sought Equality for Women
Fairclough's efforts in the House of Commons, however, were not confined to one area. She had fought from her earliest political days for equal pay for equal work for
women and was delighted when the St. Laurent administration enshrined the principle in federal legislation. She was never a strident feminist but deplored the waste of womanly talents in business and public affairs. She knew that the traditionally conservative attitude of men, and particularly of women themselves, militated against full participation.
In 1953 and in 1957 she was reelected to Parliament. The latter was the election that brought John Diefenbaker to office as prime minister. He had promised, if elected, to name a woman to his Cabinet, and Fairclough was named Canada's first female Cabinet minister as secretary of state. In the landslide government victory of 1958 she was reelected and was named to a new post as minister of citizenship and immigration, in which position she also had responsibility for Indian affairs. In the general election of 1962 she held her seat, and shortly after, she became postmaster general of the new Diefenbaker government.
Away from Politics
In 1963 Fairclough met defeat in the election that turned out the Progressive Conservative administration. After leaving politics, she returned to Hamilton and private business. She first occupied a senior executive position with a trust company, moving from that job to the chairmanship of Hamilton Hydro. Before her retirement, she served as treasurer of the Zonta International women's group.
She has been the recipient of a number of honors during her political career and also during her retirement years in Hamilton. The Canadian Blackfoot Tribe and the Six Nations Indian Band Council have recognized her efforts on the behalf of native Canadian peoples. The Canadian Council of Christians and Jews awarded her its Human Relations Award. The former Cabinet member received the Coronation Award in 1963, the Centennial Award in 1967, and the Jubilee Medal in 1977. In 1985, Fairclough was invested Dame of Grace in the Order of St. John of Jerusalem, Knights Hospitaler. Among her honors, perhaps the most gratifying was her investment in 1992 with the title "The Right Honorable" in the presence of Queen Elizabeth II. In the fall of 1996, she received the Order of Ontario, the highest honor awarded by the province of her birth.
Further Reading
For material on Canadian politics and Fairclough's role see Peter Charles Newman, Renegade in Power: The Diefenbaker Years (1964); Blair Fraser, The Search for Identity: Canada, 1945-1967 (1967); and Patrick Nicholson, Vision and Indecision (1968). For further information on Fairclough, see The Canadian Encyclopedia, Second Edition, Vol. II (1988) and "The Right Honourable Ellen Louks Fairclough, PC" at http://www.cmhf.on.ca/fairclou.htm. □
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BREAD AND CIRCUSES
Newspaper article from: The Boston Globe; 2/25/2001; ; 700+ words
; ...THE BAAL-WORSHIPING ROMAN EMPEROR HELIOGABALUS WANTED TO KICK IT UP A NOTCH, HE WOULD...HEADS. LIKE A LOT OF ANCIENT RULERS, HELIOGABALUS WAS A CREEP, A CRUEL AND GLUTTONOUS...WEALTH TO FOLLOW HIS GASTRONOMIC BLISS. Heliogabalus would have loved the Food Network...
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SOUND CHECK - NEW ALBUM REVIEWS
Newspaper article from: The Boston Globe; 4/17/2007; 700+ words
; ...EXPERIMENTAL John Zorn Six Litanies For Heliogabalus (Tzadik) Experimental chameleon John...this album, Zorn's new target is Heliogabalus, a Roman emperor recognized more for...album itself is fascinating because Heliogabalus is instrumentally depicted as scum...
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The healing dialogues of doctor Bullein.(A Dialogue ... Against the Fever Pestilence)(Critical essay)
Magazine article from: Yearbook of English Studies; 1/1/2008; ; 700+ words
; ...is described as a spiritual follower of the Roman emperor Heliogabalus (sig. B1r), an epicurean with a scandalous sex life...minds of Bullein's first readers the extended attack on Heliogabalus in Thomas Elyot's The Image of Governance, a fictionalized...
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Everything comes up roses
Newspaper article from: Sunday Star-Times; 7/6/1997; ; 644 words
; ...his banquet guests with rose petals. Fourteen-year-old Heliogabalus got carried away celebrating the beginning of his reign in...The painting by Sir Lawrence Alma-Tadema of The Roses of Heliogabalus is reproduced with an observation of how relaxed the revellers...
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MUSIC
Newspaper article from: The Independent - London; 10/2/1994; ; 700+ words
; ...s Wesendonck-Lieder and Henze's orchestral fantasy Heliogabalus Imperator, in that order. Chronologically it made sense...heavy in Amanda Roocroft's otherwise alluring voice. The Heliogabalus, a supposed orchestral showpiece, just fell flat - all...
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BOOKS: Paperbacks by Murrough O'Brien - An emperor crushed by the juggernaut of exposition Boy Caesar By Jeremy Reed PETER OWEN pounds 11.95
Newspaper article from: The Independent on Sunday; 1/11/2004; ; 700+ words
; ...way to catastrophe, the strange, androgynous figure of Heliogabalus has seemed to many chroniclers barely worth a mention. But...From the outset, he is determined to root the world of Heliogabalus in the now, so images drawn from technology abound. But...
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Cookbooks of antiquity bring a feast of facts to N.Y. exhibit
Newspaper article from: The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel; 1/6/1999; ; 700+ words
; ...attributed (probably mistakenly) to Apicius and named for the Roman emperor Varius, more commonly known as Heliogabalus. Heliogabalus "is primarily remembered as a deranged, sadistic and extravagant tyrant" who has been depicted as feasting...
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Glimpse into the ancient world
Magazine article from: The Spectator; 2/15/1997; ; 700+ words
; ...art started to become fashionable again. `The Roses of Heliogabalus' is the star of the Amsterdam show, a privately owned painting which has not been exhibited since 1888. Heliogabalus, one of Rome's most decadent emperors, is depicted...
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Good year rubbed up wrong way
Newspaper article from: New Truth & TV Extra; 6/15/2006; ; 544 words
; ...SOMETIME during his short but weird reign, Roman emperor Heliogabalus was said to have offered a huge prize to anyone who could...as a new vice but Goodyear could probably have claimed the Heliogabalus prize if only he'd been around 1600 years earlier. The...
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The root of all power
Magazine article from: The Spectator; 2/6/1999; ; 700+ words
; ...diet of sweet floury cakes and spicey wine. Maybe the Roman Empire fell because they started eating health stuff. Didn't Heliogabalus cover his male lovers in salad leaves? Anyhow, the Mediaeval Church thought certain foods sinful because they gave people...
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Heliogabalus
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
Heliogabalus or Elagabalus , c.205-222, Roman...was defeated and killed at Antioch, Heliogabalus became emperor as Marcus Aurelius Antoninus...young cousin, Alexander Severus , but Heliogabalus later tried to have the boy killed...
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Heliogabalus Imperator
Book article from: The Concise Oxford Dictionary of Music
Heliogabalus Imperator. Tone-poem (‘allegory for music’) by Henze (1971–2) after Enzensberger. F.p. Chicago (cond. Solti) 1972.
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Rulers of the Roman Empire
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
...Caracalla, 211-12 Macrinus, proclaimed emperor by his soldiers, 217-18 Heliogabalus, cousin of Caracalla, 218-22 Alexander Severus, cousin of Heliogabalus, 222-35 Maximin, proclaimed emperor by soldiers, 235-38 Gordian I, made...
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Julius Africanus, Sextus
Book article from: The Concise Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church
...He enjoyed close relations with the royal house of Edessa and he went on a successful embassy from Emmaus to the Emp. Heliogabalus (218–22). His chief work was a ‘History of the World’ to AD 217, of which fragments...
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Mime
Book article from: The Concise Oxford Companion to the Theatre
...have survived, seem to be characteristic of the mime in general. Not only was adultery a stock theme, but the Emperor Heliogabalus appears to have ordered its realistic performance on stage, and if the plot included an execution it was possible, by substituting...
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