Sam Hughes

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The Honourable Sir Sam Hughes
The Honourable Sir Sam Hughes
This article is about the Canadian Minister of Militia and Defence. For the ophecleide player, see Sam Hughes (musician). For Samuel Hughes the volunteer in the Irish Republican Army see List of members of the Irish Republican Army.

Sir Samuel Hughes, KCB, PC (January 8, 1853August 23, 1921) was the Canadian Minister of Militia and Defence during World War I. He was notable for being last Liberal-Conservative cabinet minister until he was dismissed from his cabinet post.

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Samuel Hughes was born January 8, 1853, at Solina near Bowmanville in what was then Canada West. He was educated in Durham County and later attended the Toronto Normal School and the University of Toronto. In 1866 he joined the Canadian militia's 45th (West Durham) Battalion of Infantry and fought against the Fenian raids in the 1860s and 1870s. He was a teacher from 1875 to 1885 when he moved his family to Lindsay where he had bought The Victoria Warder, the local newspaper. He was the paper's publisher from 1885 to 1897.

He was elected To Parliament in 1892, and fought in the Second Boer War in 1899 after helping to convince Wilfrid Laurier to send Canadian troops. Hughes would continually campaign to be awarded a Victoria Cross for actions that he had supposedly taken in the fighting. Hughes published most of his own accounts of the war. Hughes often said that when he left, the British commander was "sobbing like a child." In fact, Hughes was dismissed from Boer War service in the summer of 1900 for military indiscipline, and sent him back to Canada.[1] Letters in which Hughes charged the British military with incompetence had been published in Canada and South Africa. Hughes had also flagrantly disobeyed orders in a key operation by granting favourable terms to an enemy force which surrendered to him. Although Hughes had proved a competent, and sometimes exceptional, front-line officer, boastfulness and impatience told strongly against him.[2]

Hughes was appointed Minister of Militia after the election of Robert Laird Borden in 1911, with the aim of creating a distinct Canadian army within the British Empire, to be used in case of war. He wrote a letter to the Governor General, Prince Arthur about his longtime demand for the Victoria Cross. Arthur privately recommended that Borden get rid of him.

He encouraged recruitment of volunteers when the First World War broke out in 1914, and he constructed a training camp in Valcartier, Quebec. He oversaw the training of the soldiers, and within three weeks they were ready to depart, Hughes delivering a lengthy, patriotic speech on horseback first.

Hughes was an Orangeman prone to anti-Catholic sentiments, who was not well liked among French Canadians. Hughes increased tensions by sending Anglocentrics to recruit French Canadians, and by forcing French volunteers to speak English in training.

His historical reputation was sullied further by poor decisions on procurements for the force. For instance, Hughes insisted on equipping Canadian soldiers with the Canadian-made Ross rifle, the rifle Hughes preferred for target shooting. The Ross proved to be an unsuitable weapon in trench warfare conditions because when fired rapidly it was prone to malfunction. The rifle also became easily jammed with mud and its bayonet fell off easily. Canadian soldiers often took British Lee-Enfield rifles from fallen British soldiers. Hughes and Sir Charles Ross, the inventor of the rifle, remained loyal to their weapon, but Borden authorized its replacement by the Lee-Enfield rifle. 1,453 Canadian soldiers promptly disposed of the Ross Rifle.

An additional controversial decision was the purchase of the MacAdam shield-shovel, a device which Hughes patented under his secretaries name, purported to act as both a shovel (for digging trenches) and a shield against bullets. In fact, the shield-shovel was too heavy for use as a shovel, and it was incapable of stopping bullets. All purchased units were quickly discarded upon arrival in Britain.

His personal prejudices also included General Arthur Currie, whom Hughes already disliked. Currie had been an old friend of Hughes' son Garnet, but felt Garnet was not a capable soldier. When Currie took command of the army, he would not allow Garnet to serve under him much to the ire of Hughes. Currie was considered a war hero, however, and Hughes's calls for Currie's removal were ignored.

Hughes also erred in creating a committee in London to give orders to the Canadian army overseas, something that could legally be done only by the Cabinet in Ottawa. Borden created a London branch of the Cabinet to overcome this problem, but left Hughes out of it, prompting Hughes to voice his opposition in a highly publicized letter to the Prime Minister. Many of Hughes' friends, (to whom he gave military titles) became wealthy through the war effort: horses that had been refused for the Boer War, shoes with cardboard soles, and other shoddy equipment were sent with Canadian soldiers. Borden dismissed him from his post on November 9, 1916. He was replaced by Albert Edward Kemp.

Hughes remained in government as a minor figure, and died in 1921. His cottage in Eagle Lake, Ontario (located in Haliburton County) has been made into a ski chalet, and the ski resort has been named Sir Sams.

Hughes was knighted as a Knight Commander of the Order of the Bath, on August 24, 1915.

  1. ^ http://www.trentu.ca/admin/library/archives/83-1014.htm
  2. ^ http://www.civilization.ca/cwm/boer/samhugues_e.html

Parliament of Canada
Preceded by
John Augustus Barron
Member of Parliament from Victoria North
1892—1904
Succeeded by
Electoral district was abolished in 1903
Preceded by
None
Member of Parliament from Victoria
1904—1921
Succeeded by
John Jabez Thurston
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