PRENDERGAST, JAMES LUKE, merchant,
politician, office holder, and justice of the peace; b. 7 April 1800 in Harbour Grace, Nfld, son
of James Prendergast; m. there 1 Feb. 1825 Margaret Bransfield, and they had
several children; d. there 13 May 1895.
Although he was of humble origin, James Luke Prendergast had by 1840 established
a mercantile business in his home community and had also become involved in
religious and philanthropic organizations. His political career began in that
year, when he contested a by-election called because of the death of a member of
the House of Assembly for his district, Conception Bay.
At this time Newfoundland political life was dominated by bitter religious and
ethnic tensions as the Liberal party, representing Irish Roman Catholics and
reformers generally, sought to take power from the entrenched, mainly
Protestant, Conservative party. Prendergast, a Catholic, ran as an independent
Liberal against official Liberal nominee Edmund Hanrahan*. Since Conservatives
came to Prendergast’s support and the Catholic clergy and Liberal leadership did
the same for Hanrahan, the campaign turned violent. Amidst reports of arson,
shootings, and wholesale voter intimidation, Governor Henry Prescott* sent a
detachment of soldiers to the district and subsequently nullified the election.
This débâcle contributed greatly to the abolition the following year of
representative government [see Sir John Harvey*].
By 1842, however, Prendergast had become reconciled with mainstream Liberals. In
the general election held in December he was a successful candidate for the
party in Conception Bay, and he was re-elected six years later. But by 1852 he
was voting against his colleagues in the House of Assembly and, running once
again as an independent Liberal, he was defeated in the general election held
that year.
Prendergast’s political career continued to be marked by periodic estrangements
from his fellow Liberals and by his disorderly election campaigns. He again
served as a Liberal member of the House of Assembly, for Harbour Grace, from 1855 to 1859; during this term
he was an acting superintendent of fisheries and with Michael John Kelly* tabled
reports on the fisheries before the House of Assembly. Prendergast was
re-elected in the November 1859 election, after his leading opponent, Robert
Walsh, withdrew his candidacy on election day. However, an investigating select
committee of the assembly found that Walsh has been forced to withdraw because
of harassment and threats of violence. Responding to these findings, the
assembly declared the seat vacant and called a by-election for November 1860.
Prendergast won this election, without opposition, but his enemies accused him
once again of using “mob tactics” to intimidate voters and opposition
candidates. The May 1861 general election was marred in several ridings by
violent clashes between Liberal and Conservative supporters. In Harbour Grace
tensions were so great that the magistrates refused to open the polls. For the
November by-election to fill this seat, Governor Sir Alexander Bannerman*
blanketed the riding with a huge military presence to ensure an uneventful vote.
On this occasion Prendergast was soundly defeated and he was similarly
unsuccessful four years later. His political career ended when, as an
anti-confederate candidate in the 1869 general election, he was once again
unsuccessful [see Sir Frederic Bowker Terrington Carter].
Soon after this last defeat Prendergast was appointed sheriff of Harbour Grace.
He would later serve as a justice of the peace for this community, an office he
was still occupying in his late eighties."(1)
(1)Source:
Biographical Dictionary of Canada,
Geoffrey E. Budden
Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception (Harbour Grace, Nfld.), Reg. of baptisms,
marriages, and burials, 1825 (mfm. at PANL). MHA, Prendergast name file. DCB,
vol. 11 (biog. of M. J. Kelly). Encyclopedia of Nfld. (Smallwood et al.), 1:
683–90. When was that? A chronological dictionary of important events in
Newfoundland down to and including the year 1922 . . . , comp. H. M. Mosdell (St
John’s, 1923; repr. 1974). Gunn, Political hist. of Nfld., 70–71, 163.
1. James Prendergast
...2 James Luke Prendergast b.7 April 1800 in Harbour Grace, Nfld. married Feb
1, 1825 HG died after 1869
+ Margaret Bransfield of Carbonear
..2 1st dau
..2 2nd dau
..2 3rd dau.
..2 4th dau Ann Prendergast (born 1804 Harbour Grace -died
1834 Harbour Grace)
Star &
Conception Bay Journal, Harbour Grace and Carbonear 1834
James Prendergast (d. 1849)
Harbour
Grace, Newfoundland Dealer, merchant married
..Catherine
Prendergast m. Andrew Drysdale
..Lucy Prendergast
.. John Prendergast
.. Teresa Prendergast
..Elizabeth
Prendergast
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