Frank Broadstreet Carvell
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Frank Broadstreet Carvell (14 August 1862 - 9 August 1924) was a Canadian lawyer, businessman, and politician.
Carvell was born in Woodstock, New Brunswick. His father was a farmer descended from United Empire Loyalists and his mother was an Ulster Protestant.[1] He was educated locally and worked as a teacher. In 1890 he earned his law degree from Boston University and returned to Woodstock to practice law. He was elected to the county council and became involved in business with stock in the Woodstock Power Company and the Carleton Electric Company.[1]
He purchased the Carleton Sentinel, a Liberal newspaper and was also the main shareholder for a time of the Carleton Observer.[1]
In 1899 he was elected to the Legislative Assembly of New Brunswick but resigned a year later to contest the federal seat of Carleton but lost by 255 votes to Conservative Frederick Harding Hale, a lumber merchant.[1]
He won the seat on his next attempt and was the Liberal member of the Canadian House of Commons for the New Brunswick riding from 1904 until 1917. He was a minor backbencher in the Liberal caucus and was passed over for appointment to Sir Wilfrid Laurier's Cabinet in favour of William Pugsley when a New Brunswick seat at the Cabinet table opened up due to the resignation of Henry Robert Emmerson.[1] Carvell was offered a seat on the Supreme Court of New Brunswick in 1909 but turned it down.[1]
The Liberal government was defeated in the 1911 federal election and Carvell moved to the Opposition bench where he became prominent as a critic of Samuel Hughes, Borden's Militia Minister. He also became active in provincial politics, joining party organizers Peter John Veniot and Edward S. Carter as leading members of a powerful group of back-room Liberals known as the "Dark Lantern Brigade" who accused the provincial Conservative government of James Kidd Flemming of receiving kickbacks from the timber industry. [2].The New Brunswick Liberal Association offered Carvell the leadership of the provincial party but he declined at Laurier's urging.[1]
Despite his criticism of the Borden government's prosecution of the war as well as its nationalization of Canadian Northern Railways, Carvell broke with Laurier over the issue of conscription opposing Laurier's call for a referendum on the question. Carvell was approached by Borden to cross the floor during the Conscription Crisis and join his government but Carvell initially refused only to change his mind and join the government of Sir Robert Borden on October 17, 1917 as Minister of Public Works in the new Union government. He was re-elected in the 1917 federal election as a Liberal-Unionist MP for Victoria—Carleton by acclamation.[1]
Following the war Carvell wished to rejoin the Liberals but was rejected by his former party.[1] Instead, he retired from politics in 1919 upon being appointed Chairman of the Board of Railway Commissioners.[3].
Preceded by New from merger |
Member of Parliament for Victoria—Carleton 1917-1919 |
Succeeded by Thomas Wakem Caldwell |
Preceded by Frederick Harding Hale |
Member of Parliament for Carleton 1904-1917 |
Succeeded by Seat merged |
[edit] References
- ^ a b c d e f g h i Dictionary of Canadian Biography
- ^ Government of New Brunswick biographies of Premiers
- ^ History of Federal Ridings since 1867: Victoria-Carleton
[edit] External links
- Synopsis of federal political experience from the Library of Parliament
- Biography at the Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online
[edit] Further reading
- Arthur T. Doyle, Front Benches and Back Rooms: A story of corruption, muckraking, raw partisanship and political intrigue in New Brunswick, Toronto: Green Tree Publishing, 1976.
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