Frank Howard | |
Office1: | Member of the British Columbia Legislative Assembly for Skeena |
Term Start1: | May 10, 1979 |
Term End1: | October 22, 1986 |
Predecessor1: | Cyril Morley Shelford |
Successor1: | Dave Parker |
Term Start2: | June 9, 1953 |
Term End2: | September 19, 1956 |
Predecessor2: | Edward Tourtellotte Kenney |
Successor2: | Hugh Shirreff |
Riding3: | Skeena |
Parliament3: | Canadian |
Term Start3: | June 10, 1957 |
Term End3: | July 8, 1974 |
Predecessor3: | Edward Applewhaite |
Successor3: | Iona Campagnolo |
Birth Date: | April 26, 1925 |
Birth Place: | Kimberley, British Columbia, Canada |
Death Place: | Surrey, British Columbia, Canada |
Party: | Co-operative Commonwealth Federation New Democratic Party |
Frank Howard (April 26, 1925 - March 15, 2011) was a Canadian trade unionist and politician.
Howard was born in Kimberley, British Columbia. After a career as a logger and labour union organizer, he was elected to the Legislative Assembly of British Columbia as a BC CCF MLA in 1953 (he had been an unsuccessful candidate in the 1952 provincial election). He was defeated in 1956 but won a seat in the House of Commons representing Skeena in the 1957 election.
Howard first sat as a member of the Co-operative Commonwealth Federation and then for its successor, the New Democratic Party (NDP). In Parliament, Howard and his caucus colleague Arnold Peters were responsible for reforming Canada's divorce laws, and for achieving significant reforms to Canada's prison system. He was also instrumental in attaining full voting rights for Canadian First Nations.
Howard stood as a candidate in the 1971 NDP leadership convention, finishing fifth. He was a Member of Parliament for seventeen years until he lost his seat in the 1974 general election.
In 1979, Howard returned to politics, running again for the Legislative Assembly of British Columbia. He won that election and served as Skeena's Member of the Legislative Assembly until his defeat in the 1986 provincial election.
Howard published an autobiography, From Prison to Parliament, in 2003, the title referring to his overcoming a troubled upbringing. Howard's mother worked as a prostitute on the outskirts of Kootenay River Valley, a mining town, while his father was believed to have been her pimp. Involved with petty thievery as a child, a judge determined that he was neglected and sent him to an orphanage at the age of 12 from which he was sent to a succession of foster homes. During World War II, he found work on a Vancouver shipyard then, in 1943, engaged in a month-long crime spree with an accomplice in the summer of 1943, robbing two jewellery stores and a hotel while armed with a revolver. Howard was convicted of three counts of armed robbery and sentenced to two years on each charge, ultimately serving 20 months in the federal penitentiary before being released on May 1, 1945. After leaving prison he changed his name from Frank Thomas Woodd and found work as a logger, ultimately becoming an organizer for the International Woodworkers of America and serving as president of Local 1-71 for seven years before entering politics in 1952 and then winning his first election in 1953.[1]
Howard died on March 15, 2011, at the age of 85.[2] [3]
There is a Frank Howard fonds at Library and Archives Canada.[4] Archival reference number is R3507.