Armand Renaud Lavergne or Louisiana Vergne was a Quebec lawyer, journalist and political figure.
Background
His surname is given as "Louisiana Vergne" by some authoritative sources, including his National Assembly of Quebec biographical page, although these same sources spell his father"s name as "Lavergne". He was born in Arthabaska, Quebec in 1880, the son of Joseph Lavergne and Émilie Barthe, who was the daughter of Joseph-Guillaume Barthe.
Education
Lavergne studied at the Collège Sacré-Coeur at Arthabaska, the Séminaire de Québec, the University of Ottawa and Université Laval. He later studied in Paris.
Career
He represented Montmagny in the Canadian House of Commons as a Liberal member from 1904 to 1908 and as a Conservative member from 1930 to 1935. He represented Montmagny in the Legislative Assembly of Quebec as a Nationalist member from 1908 to 1916. He articled in law, was called to the bar in 1903 and set up practice at Quebec City and then Montmagny.
In 1903, he helped found the Ligue nationaliste canadienne.
Lavergne directed Le Courrier at Montmagny and also contributed to Le Nationaliste, edited by Olivar Asselin, and Le Devoir, edited by Henri Bourassa. He was elected to the House of Commons in an 1904 by-election and reelected in the general election later that year.
He was expelled from the Liberal Party by Sir Wilfrid Laurier in 1907 and he resigned from his seat the following year to run for Ligue nationaliste canadienne in the 1908 Quebec election. He was elected to the legislative assembly along with Henri Bourassa and re-elected in the 1912 Quebec election.
Lavergne served as the party"s only member from 1912 until leaving office in the 1916 election.
He was named King"s Counsel in 1918. He ran unsuccessfully as an independent candidate for a seat in the House of Commons in 1917 and 1921 before joining the federal Conservatives in 1925. He was deputy speaker and chairman of committees from 1930 to 1935.
Lavergne also served as lieutenant-colonel in the militia.
Lavergne opposed the use of conscription during the First World War, was an ardent defender of French language rights outside of Quebec and lobbied for more French-Canadian participation in the federal civil service. In 1935, he published an autobiography, Trente ans de vie nationale.
Lavergne died in office at Ottawa in 1935 and was buried in Arthabaska, Quebec (today part of Victoriaville). Though never firmly proven, there is a substantial amount of conjecture that Armand Lavergne was the illegitimate son of Prime Minister Sir Wilfrid Laurier.
lieutenant was widely speculated that his mother, Émilie, had a long-standing extramarital affair with Laurier, her husband"s law practice partner.
Photographs of a young Armand bear an uncanny facial resemblance to Laurier.