Index

We Made The R.M. of Pipestone

Politician

M.L.A. Robert Mooney

 

 


Image from “Memorable Manitobans: Manitoba Historical Society


Robert Henry Mooney was born at Wingham. Ontario, on August 10, 1873, the son of Alexander Mooney and Susan Orr. The following year he came to Manitoba with his family. They lived at Katrime near Gladstone, until 1883 when they came to the Woodnorth area.

He was educated at Virden. He taught school there for three years, and farmed. On 4 April 1901, he married Margaret Kirk, daughter of George Kirk of Kenora, Ontario. He served as a Councillor of the Rural Municipality of Pipestone from 1911 to 1922. He was active in the community on school, church, and recreation issues and was on the Pool elevator
boards and other projects.

Legislative Career

He was first elected to the Manitoba assembly in the 1922 provincial election for the constituency of Virden. Running as a candidate of the United Farmers of Manitoba, he defeated Liberal incumbent George Clingan by 677 votes. The United Farmers of Manitoba won the election, and governed as the "Progressive Party"; Mooney was returned by acclamation under this label in the 1927 election.

The Progressives and Liberals merged prior to the 1932 provincial election. Again running as a candidate of the governing coalition, Mooney defeated Conservative candidate G.H. Heenan by 432 votes in this election. In the 1936 election, he defeated Conservative O.S. Ross by 205 votes.

Mooney was returned by acclamation in the 1941 and 1949 elections, and defeated a candidate of the CCF in 1945. 

Adapted from Trails Along the Pipestone, page 743

Adapted from Memorable Manitobans / The Manitoba Historical Society




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