| Company type | Agricultural supply cooperative |
|---|---|
| Founded | 1909; 116 years ago (1909) |
| Headquarters | , |
Key people | Scott Bolton, President & CEO |
| Products | Agriculture,Retail,Petroleum,Construction |
| Revenue | 1.8 billionCAD (2018) |
| 77 million CAD (2018) | |
| Members | 120,000 |
Number of employees | 950 (2018) |
| Subsidiaries | Spruceland Lumber,Bar-W Petroleum and Electric,Stirdon Betker,Maple Leaf Petroleum |
| Website | Official website |
TheUnited Farmers of Alberta (UFA) is an association ofAlberta farmers that has served different roles in its 100-year history – as alobby group, a successful political party, and as a farm-supply retail chain. As a political party, it formed thegovernment of Alberta from 1921 to 1935.[1]
Since 1935, it has primarily been anagricultural supply cooperative headquartered inCalgary, Alberta. As of 2019[update], UFA operates 34 farm and ranch supply stores in Alberta[2] and over 110 fuel stations inBritish Columbia,Alberta andSaskatchewan.[3]
UFA was founded in 1909 as a governmentlobby group following a merger between theAlberta Farmers' Association and Alberta branches of the Canadian Society for Equity. The UFA began as a non-partisan organization whose aim was to be a lobby group promoting the interest of farmers in the province. In 1913, under presidentWilliam John Tregillus, the UFA successfully pressured Alberta'sLiberal government to organize theAlberta Farmers' Cooperative Elevator Company (AFCEC), which joined with other Prairie elevator companies to eventually become theUnited Grain Growers.Tregillus was the first president of the AFCEC.
The UFA was a believer in the co-operative movement and supportedwomen's suffrage. In 1912 women founded the parallel United Farm Women of Alberta, and in 1914, women were granted full membership rights in UFA itself.
By 1920, UFA had become the most influential lobby group in Alberta with over 30,000 registered members.
United Farmers of Alberta | |
|---|---|
| President | Henry Wise Wood (1916–1931) |
| Political leaders | Henry Wise Wood (1919–21) Herbert Greenfield (1921–25) John Edward Brownlee (1925–34) Richard Gavin Reid (1934–35) |
| Founded | 1919 (1919) |
| Dissolved | 1939 (1939) |
| Preceded by | Alberta Non-Partisan League |
| Newspaper | The U.F.A. (1922–1934) The United Farmer (1934–1936) |
| Ideology | Social democracy Progressivism Agrarianism |
| National affiliation | Progressive Party of Canada (~ 1920–1930) Co-operative Commonwealth Federation (1935–1939) |
| Governed with support of | Alberta Labor Representation League Dominion Labor Party (Alberta) |
Under pressure of losing influence to the upstartAlberta Non-Partisan League – which ran in four rural constituencies in the1917 provincial election, winning two seats – and dissatisfied with the existing political parties, UFA entered the political arena in 1919. Some prominent UFA members (including its president,Henry Wise Wood) at first opposed entering into direct politics, as opposed to lobbying, however, because they thought abandoning the UFA's non-partisan policy would cause the UFA to break up.
In 1919, UFA candidateAlexander Moore won a by-election in theCochrane constituency. In 1921,Robert Gardiner won a seat in a federal by-election, becoming UFA's first Member of Parliament.
Encouraged by this, UFA ran in 45 of Alberta's 61 ridings in the1921 provincial election. To the surprise of nearly everyone, including themselves, UFA took 38 seats in the election, winning a majority government, and sweeping theLiberals out of power after almost 16 years. UFA and Progressive party candidates also captured all but two of the Alberta federal seats in the1921 federal election (the other two were taken by Labour candidates).
As was the case with other United Farmer governments inManitoba andOntario, the UFA was elected unexpectedly and without a leader. To form its cabinet it went outside the Legislature to recruit aPremier, as did the other United Farmer governments. The UFA even approached Liberal leaderCharles Stewart to remain as premier. Stewart declined, however, not wanting to lead the assembly as a member of the opposition. UFA PresidentHenry Wise Wood also declined, and Vice-PresidentPercival Baker, an elected MLA, died 24 hours after the election. Ultimately, UFA executive memberHerbert Greenfield was named the first UFA Premier. Among his cabinet wereIrene Parlby, the second female cabinet minister in the British Empire, and CalgaryLabour Party MLAAlex Ross as Minister of Public Works.
The United Farmers government initiated several reforms, including improving medical care, broadening labour rights and making the tax system fairer. It made good on its promise of electoral reform, bringing in a measure ofproportional representation through theSTV.[4] In 1923, the government formed theAlberta Wheat Pool and upset some of its support base by endingProhibition, replacing it with open sale of alcohol through government-owned liquor stores and carefully regulated beer parlours, and refusing to establish a provincial bank, a bank owned by the provincial government, despite UFA conventions calling for it.
In 1925,John E. Brownlee, who was already widely believed to be the "true" leader of the United Farmers, succeeded Greenfield as Premier. Brownlee led the party to a second majority government in the1926 election.
In 1929, after years of negotiating, Brownlee gained control over Alberta's natural resources. This was a right other provinces were granted atConfederation or upon entry into Confederation, but which Alberta and Saskatchewan were denied when they became provinces in 1905, instead receiving a yearly cash subsidy from the federal government. This deal would later become a critical factor in Alberta's economic success as the province's oil deposits were exploited.
Riding a wave of popularity resulting from this agreement, Brownlee led the United Farmers to a third majority government in the1930 election, despite alienating socialists and labour groups as he led the party in a conservative fashion, and despite the quickly deteriorating financial conditions.
TheGreat Depression had a critical impact on the United Farmers' fortunes, as the crash in grain prices and simultaneous drought in southern Alberta hurt its support base, farmers. The government, with reduced tax revenue, engaged in cuts in services, staff and wages. The province was in debt after the grandiose spending of the relatively prosperous 1920s. The government also bailed out the hard-pressedAlberta Wheat Pool in 1929. Banks were repossessing the farms of many farmers who were unable to pay off their loans and interest when grain prices were lower than the cost of production. The government's Liberal and Conservative opponents grew louder and they hoped to become popular. At the same time, however, the government faced opposition from socialists calling for more interventionist anti-capitalist policies and for radical monetary reform. The latter stance was supported byWilliam Aberhart'sSocial Credit movement, which in 1933–35 grew to a potent force among the province's farmers.[4]
Henry Wise Wood retired as president of the UFA, more-radical-minded UFA MPRobert Gardiner, a member of theGinger Group became president; the UFA conventions passed increased calls for strong government measures to address the province's widespread poverty; the UFA joined with theCanadian Labour Party and other political groups to help found theCo-operative Commonwealth Federation, the first Canada-wide farmer/labour political party (other than the revolutionaryCommunist Party of Canada). Premier Brownlee on more than one occasion opposed the UFA's leftward slide. The final blow for Brownlee occurred when he was caught up in asex scandal as he was accused of seducing a young clerk working in the Attorney General's office. Brownlee resigned in disgrace in July 1934.
Richard G. Reid succeeded Brownlee as Premier, however with many voters jumping to the newSocial Credit Party, the United Farmers' fall in politics was as rapid as its rise. The party was wiped off the political map in the1935 election, losing all of its seats and tallying only 11 percent of the vote.
Of the nine UFA MPs elected in the1930 federal election, eight joined theCooperative Commonwealth Federation after it was formed in 1932. All eight ran as CCF candidates in the1935 federal election and were defeated by a Social Credit landslide. The ninth UFA MP,William Thomas Lucas ofCamrose, ran as aConservative and was also defeated by the Socreds.
Two years after the UFA government was defeated, the organization withdrew from electoral politics.[5] In 1938, the CCF committed itself to run candidates in the next provincial and elections, setting up local riding clubs for that purpose.[5] In 1939, UFA officially disbanded its political arm, still continuing as a farmers supply co-operative. Many of the left-wing members of the UFA organization joined the CCF, though that party would not win the support of most former UFA voters. Many right-wing and centrist members of the UFA joined theAlberta Unity Movement, an attempt to form a coalition between United Farmers, Liberals and Conservatives to defeat Social Credit in the1940 provincial election.
The CCF was folded into theNew Democratic Party in 1961. ItsAlberta wing claims the Alberta CCF's history as its own, thus making it a linear descendant of the UFA.
The United Farmers of Alberta ran candidates in several federal elections in alignment with, but usually to the left of, theProgressive Party of Canada with a number of UFA MPs sitting in the House of Commons with theGinger Group of left wing MPs.
Following Robert Gardiner's election in a federal by-election prior to the 1921 election, Alberta farmer ran 14 candidates (some as UFA, some as Progressive Party candidates) in the 1921 federal election, not running in two Calgary ridings where strong Labour candidates carried the farmer-worker banner. All the UFA candidates (and the two Calgary Labour candidates) were elected, the incumbent Liberal MPs and Conservative contenders not getting one seat. In 1926, the province's Progressive MPs ran for re-election as UFA candidates. Eight of the UFA's nine remaining MPs joined theCo-operative Commonwealth Federation when it was formed in 1932. All eight ran as CCF candidates in the1935 federal election and were defeated. The ninth,William Thomas Lucas, ran as a Conservative in 1935 and was also defeated by the Social Credit landslide that were elections in Alberta that year.
| Election | # of candidates nominated | # of seats won | # of total votes | % of national popular vote |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1921 | 2 | 2 | 22,251 | 0.71% |
| 1925 | 2 | 2 | 8,053 | 0.26% |
| 1926 | 12 | 11 | 60,740 | 1.837% |
| 1930 | 10 | 9 | 56,968 | 1.46% |
Following the dissolution of its political wing, UFA focused on its commercial operations. UFA entered into a partnership withMaple Leaf Fuels, a subsidiary ofImperial Oil in 1935 to distribute fuel to its members. The next year it began to open retail stations under the Maple Leaf brand across the province.
The first farm supply store opened in Calgary in 1954, and a second inEdmonton in 1957. That same year, UFA bought the assets of Maple Leaf Fuels, giving the co-op greater control over the business.
In 1984, UFA opened its firstcardlockfuelagency in Calgary. Today, UFA has over 110 cardlock facilities across three provinces and was the largest cardlock network in Alberta.
UFA has over 120,000 members; further, with 2007 revenues of over $1.8 billion, UFA is ranked as the 37th largest business in Alberta by revenue according to Alberta Venture magazine.[6]
In March 2009, UFA purchasedWholesale Sports in western Canada, and 15Sportsman's Warehouse locations throughout the Northwest United States, which it then re-branded as Wholesale Sports.
F/S = Farm & Ranch Supply
P = Petroleum Agency / Cardlock
106: Petro Locations (P) / 34: Farm & Ranch Supply (F/S) / 5: Fertilizer Plants (F/P)
2: Petro Locations (P) / 0: Farm & Ranch Supply (F/S):
4: Petro Locations (P) / 0: Farm & Ranch Supply (F/S):
| Preceded by | Governing party of Alberta 1921–1935 | Succeeded by |