
The Hon. Francis Cochrane
'Francis Cochrane',
PC (
November 18,
1852 –
September 22,
1919) was a
Canadian politician. A prosperous hardware merchant before entering politics, he served as mayor of
Sudbury, Ontario from
1897 to
1899, and
1902 to
1903.
He then ran as a
Conservative Party candidate for
Sudbury's electoral district in the
Legislative Assembly of Ontario in
1905. He was elected, and served until
1911. He was Minister of Lands, Forests and Mines in the government of
James P. Whitney from 1905 to
1908.
In
1911, he won a
byelection to the
Canadian House of Commons as the Conservative candidate in
Nipissing, following the appointment of
George Gordon to the
Senate. Cochrane served in Nipissing until
1917, and was
Minister of Railways and Canals in the government of Sir
Robert Borden from October 1911 until October 1917.
In
1917, he ran as the
Unionist-
Conservative candidate in the new district of
Timiskaming. He was re-elected, and served as
Minister without Portfolio until his death in
1919.
The town of
Cochrane, Ontario was named for him.
See also
★
Cochrane
External links
★
Biography at the ''Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online''
★
Federal Political Biography from the Library of Parliament