'Pierre-Alexis ("Pitre") Tremblay' (
December 27 1827–
January 4 1879) was a surveyor and
Quebec political figure. He was a
Liberal member of the
Canadian House of Commons from 1867 to 1875 and 1878 to 1879.
He was born at
La Malbaie,
Lower Canada in 1827 and studied at the
Petit Séminaire of Quebec. Near the end of 1853, he began carrying out surveys in the
Saguenay region. As a journalist, he contributed to a number of newspapers of the time: ''Le Canadien'', ''La Nation'', ''Le National'', ''L’Événement'' and ''L’Éclaireur''. He was elected to
Legislative Assembly of the Province of Canada for
Chicoutimi—Saguenay in an 1865 by-election. In 1867, he was elected to both the
National Assembly of Quebec and the House of Commons in the same riding. He was reelected in
Charlevoix both
provincially (in 1871) and federally (in 1872); he resigned from the Quebec seat in 1874 when holding seats in both legislatures became illegal. His election in Charlevoix was invalidated in August 1875. He was defeated in a by-election held in 1876 but was able to overturn this result in the
Supreme Court of Canada in 1877 by demonstrating that the Quebec clergy had exerted undue influence against him during the election. He represented Charlevoix federally from 1878 until his death in
Quebec City in 1879.
From 1862 to 1868, he was involved with Félicité Angers, better known as the author
Laure Conan, but he married Mary Ellen Connoly in 1870.
External links
★
Biography at the ''Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online''
★
Political Biography from the Library of Parliament
★
Biography from Assemblée nationale du Québec