Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Irwin Haskett

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Preceded by
  
George Dunbar

Role
  
Politician

Constituency
  
Ottawa South

Died
  
March 23, 1994

Occupation
  
Lawyer

Succeeded by
  
Claude Bennett

Name
  
Irwin Haskett


Born
  
April 22, 1903 Ottawa, Ontario (
1903-04-22
)

Political party
  
Progressive Conservative

Spouse(s)
  
Vera Moorhead (d. 1970) Mary Costache (d. 2011)

Party
  
Progressive Conservative Party of Ontario

Wesley Irwin Haskett (April 22, 1903 – March 23, 1994) was a politician in Ontario, Canada. He was a Progressive Conservative member of the Legislative Assembly of Ontario from 1959 to 1971 who represented the riding of Ottawa South. He was a cabinet minister in the government of Leslie Frost.

Contents

Background

He was born in Montreal, the son of Samuel Wesley Haskett, and was educated at Lisgar Collegiate Institute in Ottawa. He became an attorney specializing in patent law. In 1936, he married Vera Moorhead. Haskett was a freemason. Vera died in 1970 and Haskett remarried Mary Costache.

Haskett was active in the Ottawa community serving as president of the Ottawa Board of Trade and the Ontario Chamber of Commerce. He was one of the founders of the annual Tulip Festival in Ottawa which he regularly attended. His wife Mary said, "We always went to look at the tulips." He died in 1994.

Politics

In the 1959 provincial election, he ran as the Progressive Conservative candidate in the riding of Ottawa South. He defeated Liberal candidate Archibald Laidlaw by 1,936 votes. He was re-elected in 1963 and 1967. He retired from office in 1971.

On November 8, 1961, he was appointed to cabinet as Minister of Reform Institutions. On August 14, 1963 he was reassigned as Minister of Transport. He continued as Minister until 1971 when Bill Davis decided to drop him from his cabinet.

References

Irwin Haskett Wikipedia