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Sketches of Parliament and Parliamentarians Past: The Joe Howe Door and Responsible Government
David McDonald

This article examines how the proceedings of Nova Scotia’s Legislative Council became open to the public and provides answers to a well-known legend in Province House.

According to a long-standing legend in Nova Scotia’s Province House, future premier Joseph Howe, renowned for successfully defending himself against criminal libel, had his own door to the Legislative Council chamber installed so that he could observe the proceedings as he pleased. How and when the “Joe Howe door” came about, what its purpose may have been, and when it disappeared, however, were not entirely certain… until now.

Prior to 1838, the doors of the Legislative Council, which included the Executive branch, were closed to the public. On January 31, 1837, Lawrence O’Connor Doyle moved a resolution to open the doors of the Legislative Council to the public. 1 Initially the Council denied the resolution, stating that it constituted “a breach of the privilege of the Council, and a violation of Parliamentary usage, which prohibits one House from interfering with the internal regulations of the other.”2 However, in an attempt to be conciliatory, they did agree to look further into the matter. 3

Unsatisfied with this glib response, John Young moved two more resolutions of the same ilk, but Joseph Howe took this opportunity to amend those resolutions. He introduced 12 resolutions – the tenth dealt with opening the doors of the Legislative Council – championing reform which set the stage for Responsible Government in Nova Scotia 11 years later – a jurisdictional first in the British Colonies.

Accused of corruption in one of these Resolutions, the Legislative Council threatened to stop correspondence with the House unless it was rescinded and intimated that they would not approve supply.4 Howe responded by rescinding all 12 resolutions; however, “the same day … he also gave notice of motion for the appointment of a committee to prepare an address to the Crown.”5 This address included all twelve of the Resolutions.

Realizing that the question of the open doors would now be presented to the Colonial Office in Britain, the Legislative Council appointed a committee on April 4 to “report such alterations in the Council Chamber as may become necessary, whenever the Council decide that Strangers shall be admitted.”6

On April 21, the Committee reported back to the Legislative Council that an enclosed space in the Council Chamber could be allocated for a seating area with barricades to protect the pictures. The Committee suggested that entrance could be from the Robing Room “if it does not interfere with the arrangement of the Supreme Court,” 7 which it most certainly would have.

When the Council convened on January 25, 1838, it was the first time that the doors were opened to the public and the first time that it was a body independent from the Executive Council, with representatives from both the Legislative Council and the House of Assembly.

The Legislative Library recently rediscovered an architectural plan of the legislative council chamber dating from 1841 which shows the door and the barricades put in place to protect the paintings and separate the Legislative Council from the seating area. The Legislative Council was abolished in 1928.

Although the door was not specifically created for him, the “Joe Howe door”8 did indeed open the door to responsible government in Nova Scotia.

Notes

  1. Nova Scotia. House of Assembly. Journal and Proceedings of the House of Assembly of the Province of Nova Scotia, 1837. ([Halifax: House of Assembly: 1838]), pp.10-11.
  2. Nova Scotia. Legislative Council. Journal and Proceedings of His Majesty’s Council of the Province of Nova Scotia, 1837. ([Halifax: Legislative Council: 1838]), p. 11.
  3. Ibid, p. 11.
  4. Ibid, March 7, 1837, p. 34.
  5. Beck, Murray J. Joseph Howe : Volume 1 Conservative Reformer 1804-1848, Montreal: McGill-Queen’s University Press, 1982, p. 164.
  6. Legislative Council Journals, p. 63.
  7. Legislative Council Journals, p. 97.
  8. Plans of the chamber show the door still in place in 1967. It was removed some time before 1985.

Canadian Parliamentary Review Cover
Vol 38 no 3
2015






Last Updated: 2020-09-14