Francis Cochrane Explained

Honorific-Prefix:The Honourable
Francis Cochrane
Birth Date:November 18, 1852
Birth Place:Clarenceville, Quebec
Residence:Sudbury, Ontario
Office1:MPP for Nipissing East
Term Start1:1905
Term End1:1908
Predecessor1:Charles Lamarche
Successor1:riding dissolved
Office2:MPP for Sudbury
Term Start2:1908
Term End2:1911
Predecessor2:first member
Successor2:Charles McCrea
Office3:MP for Nipissing
Term Start3:1911
Term End3:1917
Predecessor3:George Gordon
Successor3:Charles Robert Harrison
Office4:MP for Timiskaming
Term Start4:1917
Term End4:1919
Predecessor4:first member
Successor4:Angus McDonald
Party:Conservative
Occupation:Merchant
Death Place:Ottawa, Ontario

Francis Cochrane, (November 18, 1852 – September 22, 1919) was a Canadian politician.

Early life

Cochrane was born in 1852 in Clarenceville, Quebec. Little is known about his early life due to a lack of personal papers. His son, Wilbur, managed to uncover some information about this period, including that he worked for Marshall Field in Chicago during the 1870s before moving to Pembroke, Ontario, where he met his wife, Alice Dunlap. He and Alice lived in Mattawa during the 1880s before moving to Sudbury. While living in Mattawa, Cochrane hosted Prime Minister John A. Macdonald at his home while he recovered from a brief illness.[1]

Municipal career

A prosperous hardware merchant in Sudbury, Ontario, he was the first president of the town's board of trade and later served as mayor of the town in 1897, 1898 and 1902 after winning a council seat in 1896.[2]

Along with local businessman William McVittie, he subsequently invested in the Wahnapitae Power Company, which was contracted to provide the town's hydroelectricity services until it was sold to the Hydroelectric Power Commission of Ontario in 1929.[3] Cochrane and McVittie also ventured into prospecting, developing the Frood Extension property in 1908.[4]

Provincial career

Cochrane first ran for provincial office in 1902 as the Conservative Party candidate in Nipissing West in the 1902 election, but was defeated by Joseph Michaud. He did not run in the 1905 election, although Premier James P. Whitney nonetheless announced an intention to give him a cabinet portfolio. This appointment was delayed when Cochrane slipped while boarding a moving train in Sudbury and lost part of his right leg, but in May of that year, Whitney transferred the Crown lands portfolio to a new Ministry of Lands, Forests and Mines and appointed Cochrane as the new minister. Cochrane was then acclaimed into office in a by-election in Nipissing East, succeeding Charles Lamarche, who resigned to make the seat available to him.

He was reelected in the 1908 election in the new electoral district of Sudbury.

Federal career

After being re-elected in 1911 George Gordon, the Conservative MP for Nipissing, stepped aside to enable Cochrane to run in a by-election and he won the seat. Gordon was subsequently appointed 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.

Honours

The town of Cochrane, Ontario was named for him.[5]

Notes and References

  1. Book: Young . Scott . Silent Frank Cochrane: The North's First Great Politician . Young . Astrid . Macmillan of Canada . 1973 . 0-7705-0889-8 . Toronto . 3–5.
  2. Book: Dorian, Charles . The First 75 Years, A Headline History of Sudbury, Canada . Arthur H. Stockwell, Ltd. . 1961 . Ilfracombe, Eng..
  3. Book: Sudbury: Rail Town to Regional Capital . Dundram Press, Ltd. . 1993 . 978-1-55002-170-7 . Wallace . C.M. . 3rd . Thomson . Ashley.
  4. Bray. R. Matthew. Cochrane, Francis. 14.
  5. Book: Hamilton, William B.. The Macmillan Book of Canadian Place Names. Macmillan of Canada. 1978. 0-7705-1524-X. Toronto. 168. 20 October 2020. registration.