Background
Ransom was born in 1868 in Lower Hutt.
Ransom was born in 1868 in Lower Hutt.
He was a cabinet minister from 1928 to 1935 in the United Government, and was acting Prime Minister in 1930 and in 1935. He received his education at Lower Hutt Primary, where he was school mate with Thomas Wilford. He played rugby and tennis during his youth.
During the Second Boer War, he was an officer in charge of the Ruahine Mounted Rifles.
He was a sheep farmer until 1888, and then a saddler in Dannevirke. From 1920 onwards, he was sheep farming in the Akitio district.
On 1 March 1893, Ransom married Antonette Katinka Sondergaard from Palmerston North at her home town. Ransom was elected onto the Dannevirke Borough Council in 1901.
He stood for Mayor of Dannevirke in 1903, but was beaten by the Lutheran pastor Hans Madsen Ries in a closely fought contest.
Ransom was Mayor of Dannevirke from 1910, when he succeeded Ries, to 1919. He represented the rural Manawatu-Wanganui electorate of Pahiatua from 1922, when he defeated Reform"s Archibald McNicol. From 1925 to 1928, he was junior whip and deputy leader of the United Party for the North Island.
During the time of the United Government, he was Minister of Public Works (1928–1930) under Joseph Ward, and Minister of Lands and Commissioner of State Forests (1930–1931) under George Forbes.
He retained his portfolios until 1935 in the United/Reform Coalition. He was twice acting Prime Minister.
In 1930, when Forbes attended the Imperial Conference in London, and again in 1935, when Forbes was overseas. In 1940, he announced that he would not stand again at the next general election due to poor health, but he died in 1943 before the end of the parliamentary term.
He was knighted (Knight Commander of the Order of Street Michael and Saint George) in 1935, and died on 22 May 1943 in Dannevirke, where he is also buried.
At the funeral, senior whip Walter Broadfoot represented the National Party, and Prime Minister Peter Fraser represented the First Labour Government.
He held numerous public offices: he was chairman of the Hawke"s Bay War Relief Association, chairman of the Dannevirke branch of the same organisation, chairman of the power board (until 1928), the first president of the local chamber of commerce, chairman of the fire board, member of the Dannevirke High School board, member of the executive of the Farmers" Union, and represented on the Dannevirke A&P Association.