Canada, and he led the young country in a 15-year period of great development.
Wilfrid Laurier was born in St-Lin, Quebec, and studied law at McGill University....
Randi R. Literature as Pulpit: the Christian social activism of Nellie L.
McClung, Wilfrid Laurier University Press, Toronto: 1993. ISBN 0-88920-235-4
Wright...
of his vigorous and well-organized campaign. In 1909 Prime Minister Sir Wilfrid Laurier asked King to be minister of labor. In 1911 the Conservatives in the general...
blocks of Canadian identity. Here is a great passage concerning this by Sir Wilfrid Laurier:
"I want the marble to remain the marble; the granite to remain granite...
New York, NY: Oxford University Press, 2002.
Ty, Eleanor. "Mary Shelley Biography." Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley. Wilfrid Laurier University. 13 September 2007...
“Time is neutral and does not change things. With courage and initiative, leaders change things” (Jesse Jackson).
Wilfrid Laurier was a great leader. He became Canada’s first French-Canadian leader and the only Prime Minister to serve Canada for an unbroken 15 years. Laurier’s life long devotion was to build a unified and tolerant Canada where people of all racial and cultural backgrounds could live together in peace and harmony (Cook and Belanger 150). His unique style of negotiation based on compromise and reconciliation set the pattern by which Canadians are well-known for today (Spigelman 4). This essay will demonstrate Wilfrid Laurier’s upbringing that brought forth his leadership style, his contributions to Canada and the grand legacy he has left behind to Canadians. Laurier’s effective leadership skills gave Canadians the most prosperous times of their lives in Canada (Spigelman 7).
The long line of Laurier’s settled in Canada since the 1670’s (Spigelman 5). Henry Charles Wilfrid Laurier, the seventh generation Laurier, was born on November 20, 1841 in the quiet village of St.Lin, Quebec to Carolus Laurier and Marcelle Martineau (Spigelman 5). Wilfrid Laurier’s parents originally instilled the first ideas of politics that shaped the vision he wanted for Canada. Carolus Laurier opposed the Church’s dominant power over the people for he strongly believed that people should be given the freedom to think for themselves (Moir). This attitude was passed on to his son as Laurier constantly fought the control that Roman Catholic bishops and priests held over the political lives of their parishioners throughout his career(Moir). Laurier’s mother gave him his love for the French language while his father sent him to an English school in New Glasgow, Quebec to learn the English language and the British customs (Skelton). This gave Laurier the opportunity to grow up understanding both the French and English much better than just about anyone else at that time...
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