George Hutton(February 4, 1922[1]inWinnipeg,Manitoba[2]– April 18, 1976) was a politician in Manitoba, Canada. He was aProgressive Conservativemember of theLegislative Assembly of Manitobafrom 1959 to 1966, and was acabinet ministerin the government ofDufferin Roblin.[1]
The son of George Harrison Hutton and Anna Marie Isaacson, Hutton was educated at United College in Winnipeg, receiving aBachelor of Artsdegree. He worked as a farmer before entering politics, and was president of the Manitoba Progressive Conservative Association in 1958. In 1949, he married Elizabeth Sarah Briercliffe.[2]
He ran for the Progressive Conservatives in the constituency of Rockwood—Iberville in the1958 provincial election,but lost toLiberal-ProgressiveincumbentRobert Bend[1]by more than 700 votes.
Hutton defeated Bend by 126 votes in the1959 election,and was appointed to Roblin's cabinet as Minister of Agriculture and Conservation on August 7, 1959. He held his position until his resignation on June 30, 1966.[1]Hutton was responsible for supervising floodway construction around the city of Winnipeg, and for introducing crop insurance to Manitoba.[2]He was re-elected by a significant margin in the1962 election,but did not run in 1966.[1]
Considered by many as Dufferin Roblin's heir apparent,[3]Hutton left the government for personal reasons and took aUnited Nationsassignment. He worked with the United Nations Food and Agricultural Organization in Turkey and India before moving to Rome, Italy, in 1973. He died there three years later.[4]
References
edit- ^abcde"MLA Biographies - Deceased".Legislative Assembly of Manitoba.Archived fromthe originalon March 30, 2014.
- ^abc"George F. Hutton (1922-1976)".Memorable Manitobans.Manitoba Historical Society.RetrievedOctober 13,2013.
- ^Ferguson, Barry; Wardhaugh, Robert (2010).Manitoba Premiers of the 19th and 20th Centuries.University of Regina Press. p. 241.ISBN978-0889772168.RetrievedOctober 13,2013.
- ^"Ex-minister Dies in Rome".Montreal Gazette.April 21, 1976. p. 11.RetrievedOctober 13,2013.