George Stewart Henry Article Index for
George
Website Links For
George
 

Information About

George Stewart Henry




When Ferguson stepped down in 1930, barely a year into the Great Depression , Henry succeeded him as Conservative party leader and Premier of Ontario. Henry continued the programme of building roads, extending Ontario's highway system from 670 km to 3888 km.

Construction of Canada's first four lane controlled access Superhighway , the Toronto to Niagara Falls Queen Elizabeth Way , is the most lasting achievement of the highway program. Henry was opposed to government intervention to deal with the economy. Aside from building roads, his government did little to alleviate public suffering during the Depression, such as unemployment in the cities, or the collapse of prices for farm products in the country. Henry's government, like the federal government of R.B. Bennett , established work camps for jobless men. They were established not so much to provide social welfare, but rather as social control, i.e., to evacuate this potentially radical element from the cities. The work camps also provided a source of labour for the construction of Henry's highway system.

In the 1934 Election , George Henry sought a new mandate from the voters in his first election as Premier. Some felt the government had little to offer beyond more road construction, and the Tories were soundly defeated by the Ontario Liberal Party led by Mitchell Hepburn .

Henry's farm, now in the North York part of the City of Toronto , became a subdivision of suburban houses in the 1960s, called " Henry Farm ". George S. Henry Academy is a public high school nearby.

  Before George Howard Ferguson
  Title1 Premier Of Ontario
  Years1 1930 &ndash 1934
  After1 Mitchell Hepburn
  Title2 Leader Of The Conservative Party Of Ontario
  Years2 1930 &ndash 1936


  Before WEN Sinclair
  Title Leader Of The Opposition In The<br> Ontario Legislature
  Years 1935 &ndash 1938
  After George Drew



Preceded by:

1914 - 1919

Treasurer Of Ontario
1934

Succeeded by:

1934 -