George E. Fournier ( Assiniboia)
Fournier was born inFrancis Macdonald Manwaring ( Birtle)
Manwaring was a late nominee in the contest. He received 957 votes (30.82%), losing to Liberal-Progressive candidate
Roderick George Hurton (
John L. Solomon ( Ethelbert)
Solomon finished third out of four candidates with 276 votes (7.23%). Liberal-Progressive candidate Michael N. Hryhorczuk was elected on the first count.Daniel McFadyen (
Bardette Elliott (
Edward P. Venables ( Hamiota)
Venables first campaigned for the Manitoba legislature in the 1949 provincial election, as a Progressive Conservative coalitionist. He received 1,237 votes, and finished a close second against Liberal-Progressive candidate
Charles H. Spence (
Hugh Morrison ( Manitou-Morden)
Morrison finished in first place on the first count with 1,606 votes (46.99%), and was declared elected on the second count. See his biography page for more information.John A. Burgess ( Minnedosa)
Burgess was a merchant in Minnedosa, and a formerHarold Alexander Nelson ( Norfolk—Beautiful Plains)
Nelson was a farmer in the Carberry district. He campaigned for theWilliam C. Warren ( Portage la Prairie)
Warren was born inLeo A. Recksiedler (
Fred E. Cowan ( Roblin)
Cowan was born in Killarney, Manitoba. He was a bookkeeper in Roblin, and was sixty years old at the time of the election. He finished fourth out of four candidates with 227 votes (7.74%).H.G. Langrell ( Rockwood)
Langrell finished second out of three candidates with 656 votes (21.89%). Independent Liberal-Progressive candidateKeith Porter (
Keith H. Robson (
Raymond Hughes (
Louis Leger (St. Boniface)
Leger was also an alderman in St. Boniface at the time of the election. He had previously worked as a clerk. He campaigned for the House of Commons of Canada in the 1949 federal election, and finished third out of three candidates with 2,557 votes. The winner wasWalter H. Whyte ( St. Clements)
Whyte finished fourth out of four candidates with 378 votes (6.51%). Liberal-Progressive candidateA.H. Watt (
Errick Willis ( Turtle Mountain)
Willis, the party leader, was elected on the first count with 1,777 votes (56.11%). See his biography page for more information.
Joseph Stepnuk (Winnipeg Centre)
Stepnuk received 478 votes (2.32%) on the first count, finishing eleventh out of fourteen candidates. He was eliminated after the third count, having increased his total to 489 votes (2.38%). During the campaign, Stepnuk argued that Canadian resources should be chiefly for domestic use, not for export. He also used the slogan, "Vote Conservative for Winnipeg - reduce taxes". Stepnuk later campaigned in Elmwood in the 1958 provincial election, and finished in third place with 1,084 votes. The winner was Steve Peters of the Manitoba Cooperative Commonwealth Federation. ''Note: The Progressive Conservatives nominated Scott and Stepnuk for Winnipeg Centre on December 1, 1952, and indicated that other candidates might follow. None did.''Stanley M. Carrick ( Winnipeg North)
Carrick was a councillor inDufferin Roblin ( Winnipeg South)
Roblin was declared elected to the second position on the first ballot. He became leader of the Progressive Conservative Party in 1954, and Premier of Manitoba in 1958. See his biography page for more information.
Maude McCreery (Winnipeg South)
McCreery was a Winnipeg city councillor at the time of the election. Serving as a member of the Civic Election Committee. Shortly before the election, she was one of five councillors to oppose a bill outlawing racial discrimination in the workplace. McCreery was the first woman to run for provincial office in Manitoba as a candidate of the Progressive Conservative Party. She finished fifth on the first count with 1,820 votes (6.25%), and was eliminated on the sixth count with 2,318 votes (7.96%). She was re-elected to the Winnipeg City Council for Ward One in the