Henri-Elzéar Taschereau
See also: Taschereau (homonymy)
the very honourable Henri Elzéar Taschereau (born October 7th 1836, deceased the April 14th 1911) was judge as a chief of the Supreme court of Canada.
Born with Holy-Marie-with-Beauce (Low-Canada), wire of Pierre-Elzéar Taschereau and Catherine Hénédine Dionne, it is allowed with the bar of Quebec in 1857 and practical the right to Quebec.
Taschereau launches out in policy in 1861 when he is elected with the legislative Assemblée of the Province of Canada where he is opposed to the Canadian Confédération. It is named judge of the Superior court of Quebec in 1871 and at the Supreme court of Canada in 1878, and égalament teaches the part-time right to the Université of Ottawa. In 1902 he becomes judge as a chief of the Supreme court, occupant this station for one four years duration until its retirement in 1906. It is made knight in 1902 and becomes member of the British private Conseil in 1904.
He was the nephew of the cardinal Elzéar-Alexandre Taschereau. The son of Henri-Elzéar, Louis-Alexandre Taschereau, becomes Prime Minister for Quebec; its grandson Robert Taschereau imitates it while becoming in his turn judges as a chief of Canada.
See too
- List of the judges as a chief of the Supreme court of Canada
External bond
- Biography on the Web site of the Supreme court of Canada
- Biography of the biographical Dictionary of Canada in line
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