Background
The son of Henry Thompson, Doctor of Medicine, and Elizabeth Curtis, he was born in Harbour Grace and was educated there.
The son of Henry Thompson, Doctor of Medicine, and Elizabeth Curtis, he was born in Harbour Grace and was educated there.
He represented Twillingate and Fogo from 1882 to 1885 and Twillingate from 1889 to 1895 in the Newfoundland House of Assembly. Thompson married Sarah Ann Salter, Administration Member of the Order of the British Empire, of Saint John"s on August 2, 1883. He was employed with the Harbour Grace Standard as a printer.
In 1880 he moved to Twillingate, where he founded the Twillingate Sun.
In 1898, he founded the Vindicator and Brigus Reporter. Thompson was first elected to the assembly in 1882 as a supporter of William Whiteway.
He ran unsuccessfully for reelection in 1885 as an independent, supporting Whiteway, and in 1889 was elected as a Liberal. He was reelected in 1893 and was named Surveyor-general, serving in the cabinet of Daniel Joseph Greene.
He resigned his seat in 1895 to allow Robert Bond to run for a seat in the assembly.
He was named a stipendiary magistrate for Brigus that same year and moved to Conception Bay. In 1900, he ran unsuccessfully for the Portuguese-de-Grave seat in the assembly as a Liberal. Thompson retired from his position as magistrate in 1934.
He died in Brigus four years later.
Their son was Rupert Bartlett, Queen's Counsel, Justice of the Supreme Court of Newfoundland and the Northwest Territories. Thompson"s son, Harold William Thompson, founded Thompson Publications In Toronto, Ontario.
Thompson"s sister, Maria Raven Thompson, was married to Alexander A. Parsons. By virtue of his mother, Thompson was a cousin of Leslie Curtis, Queen's Counsel, and John Stuart Foster, Junior.
His former residence at Brigus has been designated a heritage structure by the Heritage Foundation of Newfoundland and Labrador.