Frank Rolleston

New Zealand politician (1873–1946)


title: "Frank Rolleston" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["1873-births", "1946-deaths", "members-of-the-cabinet-of-new-zealand", "ministers-of-defence-of-new-zealand", "reform-party-(new-zealand)-mps", "mayors-of-timaru", "university-of-canterbury-alumni", "commanders-of-the-order-of-the-star-of-romania", "members-of-the-new-zealand-house-of-representatives", "new-zealand-mps-for-south-island-electorates", "unsuccessful-candidates-in-the-1905-new-zealand-general-election", "unsuccessful-candidates-in-the-1928-new-zealand-general-election", "people-educated-at-christ's-college,-christchurch", "rolleston-family", "20th-century-new-zealand-lawyers", "ministers-of-justice-of-new-zealand", "brittan-family"] description: "New Zealand politician (1873–1946)" topic_path: "law" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frank_Rolleston" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0

::summary New Zealand politician (1873–1946) ::

::data[format=table title="Infobox officeholder"]

FieldValue
nameFrank Rolleston
imageFrank Rolleston.jpg
captionFrank Rolleston
birth_date
birth_placeChristchurch, New Zealand
death_date
death_placeTimaru, New Zealand
spouseMary Rolleston (née Blair)
relationsJoseph Brittan (grandfather)
William Rolleston (father)
Mary Rolleston (mother)
John Rolleston (brother)
Humphry Rolleston (grandson)
order26th Minister of Justice
primeministerGordon Coates
term_start18 January 1926
term_end26 November 1928
predecessorJames Parr
successorWilliam Downie Stewart
order215th Minister of Defence
primeminister2Gordon Coates
term_start218 January 1926
term_end226 November 1928
predecessor2Heaton Rhodes
successor2William Downie Stewart
order314th Attorney-General
term_start324 May 1926
term_end326 November 1928
predecessor3William Downie Stewart
successor3Thomas Sidey
constituency_MP4Timaru
parliament4New Zealand
term_start4
term_end41928
predecessor4James Craigie
successor4Clyde Carr
::

|honorific-prefix = |name = Frank Rolleston |honorific-suffix = |image = Frank Rolleston.jpg |alt = |caption = Frank Rolleston |birth_date = |birth_place = Christchurch, New Zealand |death_date = |death_place = Timaru, New Zealand |spouse = Mary Rolleston (née Blair) |relations = Joseph Brittan (grandfather) William Rolleston (father) Mary Rolleston (mother) John Rolleston (brother) Humphry Rolleston (grandson) |order = 26th Minister of Justice |primeminister = Gordon Coates |term_start = 18 January 1926 |term_end = 26 November 1928 |predecessor = James Parr |successor = William Downie Stewart |order2 = 15th Minister of Defence |primeminister2 = Gordon Coates |term_start2 = 18 January 1926 |term_end2 = 26 November 1928 |predecessor2 = Heaton Rhodes |successor2 = William Downie Stewart |order3 = 14th Attorney-General |term_start3 = 24 May 1926 |term_end3 = 26 November 1928 |predecessor3 = William Downie Stewart |successor3 = Thomas Sidey |constituency_MP4 = Timaru |parliament4 = New Zealand |term_start4 = |term_end4 = 1928 |predecessor4 = James Craigie |successor4 = Clyde Carr |religion = |profession = Francis Joseph Rolleston (11 May 1873 – 8 September 1946) was a New Zealand politician of the Reform Party.

Early life

::figure[src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/6/6b/Mary_and_William_Rolleston_and_their_children,_at_Kapunatiki.jpg" caption="Mary and William Rolleston and their children, at Kapunatiki; Frank Rolleston sitting in the front row in the middle"] ::

Rolleston was born in Christchurch in 1873, the son of the last Superintendent of the Canterbury Province, William Rolleston and his wife Mary Rolleston. At the time of his birth, the family was living at Linwood House. His grandfather was Joseph Brittan (1805–1867), who was married to Sophia Brittan (died 1877).

From 1880 to 1884, the Rolleston family lived in Wellington. William Rolleston held various ministerial posts in ministries led by John Hall (1879–1882), Frederick Whitaker (1882–1883) and Harry Atkinson (1883–1884) and their house in Molesworth Street, on the site that is these days occupied by Saint Paul's Cathedral, gave easy access to the Parliament Buildings. With the defeat of the Atkinson Ministry, William Rolleston lost his ministerial income and due to the effects of the depression of the 1880s, the family moved to William Rolleston's 800 acres farm Kapunatiki at the south bank of the Rangitata River near its mouth in 1884.

Frank Rolleston was educated at Christ's College, where along with his older three brothers he was a boarder. At one point, Frank Rolleston and the one year older Hector suffered the humiliation of having their school trousers lengthened by some ill-matching material. Later, his older brother Lance (born 1869) was sent to England to finish his medical degree. Frank Rolleston, considered by his father the most able of his boys, was to go to Oxford University, but tight finances prevented this, and Lance Rolleston could only complete his degree with the financial help of his uncle Robert (his father's oldest brother). Instead, Frank Rolleston attended the University of Canterbury, from where he graduated with a BA and LLB.

On 3 March 1908, Rolleston married Mary Winifred Blair in Timaru.

Political career

|electorate= Timaru |party= Reform Party (New Zealand) |start= |end=1925 |term=21st |electorate= Timaru |party= Reform Party (New Zealand) |start= |end=1928 |term=22nd Rolleston first stood for Parliament in the in the Timaru electorate. Whilst he "put up an excellent fight" against William Hall-Jones, the incumbent Hall-Jones obtained 3479 votes versus 2432 votes for Rolleston.

He represented the Timaru electorate from 1922, when he defeated, with a majority of 282 votes, Percy Vinnell of the Labour Party. Rolleston and Vinnell contested the 1925 election, when Rolleston obtained a much increased majority of 2486 votes. Rolleston lost the 1928 election against Rev Clyde Carr of the Labour Party, who would go on and represent the electorate until 1962.

Rolleston was a Cabinet minister, being the Minister of Defence, Minister of Justice and Attorney-General from 1926 to 1928 in the Reform Government of New Zealand.

His brother John was also elected to Parliament in 1922 (representing Waitomo) and was also defeated in 1928.

Frank Rolleston was Mayor of Timaru from 1921 to 1923.

Awards and death

Rolleston was awarded the King George V Silver Jubilee Medal in 1935, and the King George VI Coronation Medal in 1937. He died on 8 September 1946 in Timaru.

Notes

References

-
-
-

References

  1. "HON FRANCIS JOSEPH ROLLESTON". Timaru District Council.
  2. {{DNZB. Gardner. W. J.. 1r17. Rolleston, William – Biography. 14 December 2011
  3. {{DNZB. Starky. Suzanne. 1r16. Rolleston, Elizabeth Mary – Biography. 4 September 2011
  4. "Linwood House". NZHPT.
  5. (24 October 1905). "The coming elections". Wairarapa Daily Times.
  6. (7 December 1905). "The following are the results of the electoral poll for other districts". Bruce Herald.
  7. (12 December 1922). "South Island Seats". Otautau Standard and Wallace County Chronicle.
  8. (14 November 1925). "Amended Returns". [[The Evening Post (New Zealand).
  9. (17 November 1928). "Amended Polling Returns". [[The Evening Post (New Zealand).

::callout[type=info title="Wikipedia Source"] This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page. ::

1873-births1946-deathsmembers-of-the-cabinet-of-new-zealandministers-of-defence-of-new-zealandreform-party-(new-zealand)-mpsmayors-of-timaruuniversity-of-canterbury-alumnicommanders-of-the-order-of-the-star-of-romaniamembers-of-the-new-zealand-house-of-representativesnew-zealand-mps-for-south-island-electoratesunsuccessful-candidates-in-the-1905-new-zealand-general-electionunsuccessful-candidates-in-the-1928-new-zealand-general-electionpeople-educated-at-christ's-college,-christchurchrolleston-family20th-century-new-zealand-lawyersministers-of-justice-of-new-zealandbrittan-family