Frank MacMillan should not be confused with Frank McMillan.
Frank MacMillan | |
Office: | Mayor of Saskatoon |
Term Start: | 1919 |
Term End: | 1920 |
Predecessor: | Alexander MacGillivray Young |
Successor: | Alexander MacGillivray Young |
Constituency Mp2: | Saskatoon |
Parliament2: | Canada |
Term Start2: | 1930 |
Term End2: | 1935 |
Predecessor2: | Alexander MacGillivray Young |
Successor2: | Riding abolished |
Birth Date: | 15 May 1882 |
Birth Place: | Chicago, Illinois, U.S. |
Death Place: | Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada |
Death Cause: | Heart attack |
Party: | Conservative |
Frank Roland MacMillan (May 15, 1882 - April 7, 1948) was a prominent businessman and politician in Saskatoon in central Saskatchewan, Canada.[1]
He was born in Chicago, Illinois, and moved to Toronto with his family at the age of three. He married in Toronto and moved to Saskatoon, where he worked for John Macdonald & Co. for seven years before starting his own menswear business in 1908 in partnership with C. D. Mitcher.[2] He purchased the Currie Bros. store in 1911, renaming it the MacMillan Department Store[2] and in 1913 opened moved it to the new MacMillan Building was opened at 21st Street and Third Avenue. MacMillan sold his business to Eaton's in 1927.[3]
MacMillan was elected to Saskatoon city council as an alderman in 1913[2] and became Mayor of Saskatoon in 1919.[3]
A Conservative, he ran for the Saskatoon federal seat in the House of Commons of Canada in the 1925 and 1926 federal elections without success before winning a seat in the 1930 federal election that also elected a Tory government under R.B. Bennett. As an MP, MacMillan served on the House of Commons' Railway Committee and was instrumental in persuading the federal government to contribute to the construction of the 19th Street and Broadway Bridge as relief projects during the Great Depression[2] as well as the C. P. Bridge at Borden.[3] He did not run in the 1935 federal election.
MacMillan died of a heart attack in a Vancouver, British Columbia, hotel on April 7, 1948.[3]