Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/James_Johnson_(Manitoba_politician)> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 64 of
64
with 100 triples per page.
- James_Johnson_(Manitoba_politician) abstract "James Johnson (November 18, 1855 – February 6, 1929) was a politician in Manitoba, Canada. He served in the Legislative Assembly of Manitoba from 1897 to 1915, as a member of the Conservative Party. Johnson was a cabinet minister in the government of Hugh John Macdonald, and was named speaker of the assembly in 1904.Johnson was born in Mitchell, Canada West (now Ontario), the son of John Johnson, and was educated in that community. He worked as a farmer, and served as president of the Boissevain Land Company. Johnson was a reeve and councillor in Morton, and served as mayor of Boissevain. In religion, he was a member of the Church of England. In 1879, he married Susannah Oliver.Johnson was first elected to the Manitoba legislature in a by-election held on November 27, 1897 in the constituency of Turtle Mountain following the death of John Hettle. Running as an independent Conservative, he defeated his Liberal opponent by 150 votes. He was re-elected as an independent Conservative in the 1899 provincial election, defeating Liberal J.S. Reikie by an increased margin.The Conservatives won a majority government in this election, and Johnson was appointed to cabinet on January 10, 1900 as a minister without portfolio in Hugh John Macdonald's government. He was dropped from cabinet on October 29, 1900, when Rodmond P. Roblin replaced Macdonald as premier.Johnson was re-elected as an official Conservative candidate in the 1903 provincial election, and was chosen as speaker of the assembly on January 7, 1904. He held this position for the next eleven years, until his departure from the legislature in 1915. He was re-elected without difficulty in the elections of 1907 and 1910, and defeated Liberal challenger George William McDonald by sixty-two votes in the 1914 election.The Conservative administration of Rodmond P. Roblin was forced to resign from office in 1915, amid a serious corruption scandal. A new general election was called, which the Liberals won in a landslide. Johnson lost to George McDonald by thirty-six votes, in a rematch from the previous year. He died in Boissevain in 1929.".
- James_Johnson_(Manitoba_politician) wikiPageID "2558447".
- James_Johnson_(Manitoba_politician) wikiPageLength "4061".
- James_Johnson_(Manitoba_politician) wikiPageOutDegree "36".
- James_Johnson_(Manitoba_politician) wikiPageRevisionID "705706899".
- James_Johnson_(Manitoba_politician) wikiPageWikiLink Boissevain,_Manitoba.
- James_Johnson_(Manitoba_politician) wikiPageWikiLink By-election.
- James_Johnson_(Manitoba_politician) wikiPageWikiLink Canada.
- James_Johnson_(Manitoba_politician) wikiPageWikiLink Category:1855_births.
- James_Johnson_(Manitoba_politician) wikiPageWikiLink Category:1929_deaths.
- James_Johnson_(Manitoba_politician) wikiPageWikiLink Category:Mayors_of_places_in_Manitoba.
- James_Johnson_(Manitoba_politician) wikiPageWikiLink Category:People_from_Boissevain,_Manitoba.
- James_Johnson_(Manitoba_politician) wikiPageWikiLink Category:Progressive_Conservative_Party_of_Manitoba_MLAs.
- James_Johnson_(Manitoba_politician) wikiPageWikiLink Category:Speakers_of_the_Legislative_Assembly_of_Manitoba.
- James_Johnson_(Manitoba_politician) wikiPageWikiLink Church_of_England.
- James_Johnson_(Manitoba_politician) wikiPageWikiLink George_William_McDonald.
- James_Johnson_(Manitoba_politician) wikiPageWikiLink Hugh_John_Macdonald.
- James_Johnson_(Manitoba_politician) wikiPageWikiLink J.S._Reikie.
- James_Johnson_(Manitoba_politician) wikiPageWikiLink John_Hettle.
- James_Johnson_(Manitoba_politician) wikiPageWikiLink Legislative_Assembly_of_Manitoba.
- James_Johnson_(Manitoba_politician) wikiPageWikiLink Manitoba.
- James_Johnson_(Manitoba_politician) wikiPageWikiLink Manitoba_Liberal_Party.
- James_Johnson_(Manitoba_politician) wikiPageWikiLink Manitoba_general_election,_1899.
- James_Johnson_(Manitoba_politician) wikiPageWikiLink Manitoba_general_election,_1903.
- James_Johnson_(Manitoba_politician) wikiPageWikiLink Manitoba_general_election,_1907.
- James_Johnson_(Manitoba_politician) wikiPageWikiLink Manitoba_general_election,_1910.
- James_Johnson_(Manitoba_politician) wikiPageWikiLink Manitoba_general_election,_1914.
- James_Johnson_(Manitoba_politician) wikiPageWikiLink Manitoba_general_election,_1915.
- James_Johnson_(Manitoba_politician) wikiPageWikiLink Mayor.
- James_Johnson_(Manitoba_politician) wikiPageWikiLink Minister_(government).
- James_Johnson_(Manitoba_politician) wikiPageWikiLink Minister_without_portfolio.
- James_Johnson_(Manitoba_politician) wikiPageWikiLink Mitchell,_Ontario.
- James_Johnson_(Manitoba_politician) wikiPageWikiLink Ontario.
- James_Johnson_(Manitoba_politician) wikiPageWikiLink Progressive_Conservative_Party_of_Manitoba.
- James_Johnson_(Manitoba_politician) wikiPageWikiLink Province_of_Canada.
- James_Johnson_(Manitoba_politician) wikiPageWikiLink Rodmond_Roblin.
- James_Johnson_(Manitoba_politician) wikiPageWikiLink Rural_Municipality_of_Morton.
- James_Johnson_(Manitoba_politician) wikiPageWikiLink Speaker_of_the_Legislative_Assembly_of_Manitoba.
- James_Johnson_(Manitoba_politician) wikiPageWikiLink Turtle_Mountain_(electoral_district).
- James_Johnson_(Manitoba_politician) wikiPageWikiLinkText "James Johnson (Manitoba politician)".
- James_Johnson_(Manitoba_politician) wikiPageWikiLinkText "James Johnson".
- James_Johnson_(Manitoba_politician) wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- James_Johnson_(Manitoba_politician) wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Speakers_of_the_Legislative_Assembly_of_Manitoba.
- James_Johnson_(Manitoba_politician) subject Category:1855_births.
- James_Johnson_(Manitoba_politician) subject Category:1929_deaths.
- James_Johnson_(Manitoba_politician) subject Category:Mayors_of_places_in_Manitoba.
- James_Johnson_(Manitoba_politician) subject Category:People_from_Boissevain,_Manitoba.
- James_Johnson_(Manitoba_politician) subject Category:Progressive_Conservative_Party_of_Manitoba_MLAs.
- James_Johnson_(Manitoba_politician) subject Category:Speakers_of_the_Legislative_Assembly_of_Manitoba.
- James_Johnson_(Manitoba_politician) hypernym Politician.
- James_Johnson_(Manitoba_politician) type Mayor.
- James_Johnson_(Manitoba_politician) type Person.
- James_Johnson_(Manitoba_politician) type Politician.
- James_Johnson_(Manitoba_politician) type Chair.
- James_Johnson_(Manitoba_politician) type Mayor.
- James_Johnson_(Manitoba_politician) type Member.
- James_Johnson_(Manitoba_politician) type Politician.
- James_Johnson_(Manitoba_politician) comment "James Johnson (November 18, 1855 – February 6, 1929) was a politician in Manitoba, Canada. He served in the Legislative Assembly of Manitoba from 1897 to 1915, as a member of the Conservative Party. Johnson was a cabinet minister in the government of Hugh John Macdonald, and was named speaker of the assembly in 1904.Johnson was born in Mitchell, Canada West (now Ontario), the son of John Johnson, and was educated in that community.".
- James_Johnson_(Manitoba_politician) label "James Johnson (Manitoba politician)".
- James_Johnson_(Manitoba_politician) sameAs Q6136894.
- James_Johnson_(Manitoba_politician) sameAs m.07mym6.
- James_Johnson_(Manitoba_politician) sameAs Q6136894.
- James_Johnson_(Manitoba_politician) wasDerivedFrom James_Johnson_(Manitoba_politician)?oldid=705706899.
- James_Johnson_(Manitoba_politician) isPrimaryTopicOf James_Johnson_(Manitoba_politician).