- Francis Black
Francis Mollison Black (
July 17 ,1870 —February 19 ,1941 ) was a politician inManitoba ,Canada . He served in theLegislative Assembly of Manitoba from 1922 to 1927, and was acabinet minister inJohn Bracken 's government from 1922 to 1925.Black was born in
Kilmarnock ,Scotland , and was educated atPerth Academy and atKing's College London . He moved to Canada in 1891, and worked as a financial promoter. Black served as president of the Calgary Board of Trade in 1916-17, and was a member of theAlberta Public Utilities Commission in 1917. He later moved to Manitoba, and became treasurer of theUnited Grain Growers association.Black's entry into politics came about in an unusual manner, after the
United Farmers of Manitoba (UFM) emerged as the province's largest political party in the 1922 provincial election. The UFM won 25 seats out of 52, with elections deferred in three other northern seats. They were not an organized political party, however, and did not have a leader untilJohn Bracken was chosen by caucus after the election.The UFM, which governed as the Progressive Party, promoted the philosophy that Manitoba should be governed in an efficient, businesslike and non-partisan manner. Although Black had no political experience, and was not a candidate in the 1922 election, his successful management of the United Grain Growers recommended him to the new administration. He was chosen as Bracken's Provincial Treasurer and Minister of Telephones and Telegrams on August 8, 1922. On September 13, he was declared elected by acclamation for the sprawling northern constituency of Rupertsland, one of the province's deferred seats.
The historian John Kendle has described Black as "a dry, dour Scotsman renowned for his frugality and efficiency". He proved equally cautious and frugal as a finance minister, and played little role in parliamentary debates.
Black resigned his ministerial portfolios on
January 12 , 1925, and served as a government backbencher for the next two years. He did not seek re-election in 1927.
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