W. F. Roberts Explained

William F. Roberts
Office:Member of the Legislative Assembly of New BrunswickMinister Without Portfolio (1917-1918)Minister of Health (1918-1925)Minister of Health and Labour (1935-1938)
Term:1917-1925, and 1935–1938
Constituency:Saint John
Birth Date:18 December 1869
Birth Place:Saint John, New Brunswick
Death Place:Saint John, New Brunswick
Party:New Brunswick Liberal Association
Occupation:physician

William Francis Roberts (December 18, 1869  - February 10, 1938) was a medical doctor, public health pioneer, women's voting rights advocate, and New Brunswick politician. Born and raised in Saint John, New Brunswick, he graduated from the University of New Brunswick and the Belleview Hospital Medical College in New York City and became an important advocate for public health.[1]

Once appointed coroner for Saint John in 1902, he pushed for regulations and reforms that affected slaughterhouses, milk supply, sewage disposal, disease epidemics, and health education in schools. He was narrowly elected as a Liberal member of the Legislative Assembly of New Brunswick in 1917, and was at the centre of a battle over whether or not to create a ministry of health.[2]

The legislation creating the Department of Health was passed in 1918 and Roberts was appointed the first Minister of Health in the British Empire. The influenza epidemic which followed shortly after the creation of the new department solidified its existence and was given credit by some for limiting the extent of the epidemic in New Brunswick. After being defeated in the 1925 provincial election, he once again served as an MLA for Saint John and as Minister of Health and Labour from 1935 until his death on February 10, 1938.[3]

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Notes and References

  1. Charles Hayter, "New Brunswick's Remarkable Dr. Roberts," Canadian Medical Association Journal, 146:9, 1637-1639.
  2. Arthur T. Doyle, Front Benches and Back Rooms: A Story of Political Intrigue and Corruption in New Brunswick. Green Tree Publishing Company, 1976
  3. Jane Jenkins, "Diagnosing Collective Memory Loss: Integrating Historical Awareness into New Brunswick’s Health Care Policy Debate," Journal of New Brunswick Studies, Issue 8 (Fall 2017)