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Personne/organisme

Aird, Alexander

  • glen

Alexander Aird, 1851-1921, was born in Scotland and moved to Millarville, Alberta to ranch about 1889. In 1902 he moved to Calgary to work for the Calgary Furniture Company. He and his wife had two sons, J. Sydney, 1896-1976, and William Alexander.

Andrekson, Alexander

  • lasa

The Honourable Mr. Justice Alexander Andrew Andrekson was born in Parnu, Estonia on 13 November 1923. In 1925, the Andrekson family made the decision to immigrate to Canada, living first at Fort St. James, British Columbia before settling in Barons, Alberta and beginning their new lives in Canada as grain farmers. <p>In high school, Andrekson played for his high school basketball team, the Barons Chinooks, and was a member of the team when they won an Alberta Provincial High School championship. His involvement in athletics did not end in high school however. Andrekson pursued his love for basketball as manager of the University of Alberta's Men's Inter-faculty Basketball team and as their undefeated 1948 season and later receiving a Block 'A' award as a member of the team. As an undergraduate student working towards a B.Sc. in Ichthyology, Andrekson also found time to become the President of the University of Alberta Men's Athletics and a member of the University of Alberta Students Council from 1948-1949, receiving a Gold Key award for student participation. Andrekson was also a member of Delta Upsilon, and roomed with Kenneth Moore, a future Alberta Chief Justice, who presided over Andrekson's swearing-in ceremony as a Court of Queen's Bench Justice. ;<p>After receiving his B.Sc. in 1947 and his M.Sc. in 1949, both from the University of Alberta, Andrekson spent several years in the study of ichthyology. In 1949, Andrekson became a part of the Fisheries Research Board of Canada at Departure Bay on Vancouver as an Associate Biologist. Two years after joining the Fisheries Research Board, Andrekson decided to forgo the pursuit of a Ph.D. in Ichthyology and instead decided to embark on a career in law, entering the University of Alberta's Faculty of Law in 1951. As a member of the Law School Class of 1954, Andrekson was elected President of his graduating class in 1953-1954. <p>After receiving his L.L.B., he entered into articles with Eldon D. Foote of the Edmonton law firm Bryan Foote & Crossley. After admission to the Alberta Bar on 10 June 1955, Andrekson established a general practice with an emphasis on corporate/commercial law and eventually became partner in 1975 with the Edmonton firm of Bryan Andrekson, the successor firm to Bryan Foote & Crossley(now Bryan & Company). <p>Throughout his life Andrekson maintained an active involvement in both his profession and his community. For the latter, Andrekson was an active member of the Board of Stewards for the Robertson United Church from 1959-1969, Chairman of the Provincial Mental Health Review Panel from 1969 and Vice-Chairman of the Provincial Mental Health Advisory Council from 1974-1976. Andrekson also continued his commitment to his alma mater, participating as a Lecturer in Contracts at the University of Alberta from 1967-1969 and a law representative on the University of Alberta Alumni Association 1974-1976. <p>Professionally, Andrekson had a strong presence on both the Edmonton Bar Association and the Law Society of Alberta. In regards to the former, Andrekson first began as a Member of the Executive in 1968 and gradually moved up the executive ranks to become President of the Edmonton Bar Association for 1974-1975. His involvement with the Law Society of Alberta included membership on a variety of committees including: Internal Management, Judicial Council of Judges, Legislation and Administration of Justice, Paralegal Personnel, Legal Aid, Advertising, Discipline, Library and Joint Library, Finance, Viscount Bennett Scholarship, Heritage, Committee to Computerize Law Society of Alberta Administrative Offices and Records, Committee to Study Deposits in Trust Accounts and the Executive Committee. As a member of the Heritage Committee, Andrekson became involved in the eventual creation of what would become the Legal Archives Society of Alberta. ;<p>From 1976-1987, Andrekson was a Bencher of the Law Society, serving as its Vice-President from 1981-1982 and its President from 1982-1983. As President of the Law Society from 1982-1983, Andrekson had an avowed intention to assure the continued independence of the profession; maintain the credibility and integrity of the profession; implement rules regarding competence in the profession; and stress the importance of continuing legal education. <p>After being designated as Queen's Counsel on 19 December 1973 as well as honoured as an Honourary Bencher of the Law Society of Alberta as well as an Honourary Life Member of the Law Society of Saskatchewan in 1983, Andrekson was appointed to the Court of Queen's Bench by an Order in Council dated 22 August 1985 by the federal Justice Minister John Crosbie. On 24 September 1985, at the age of 61, Chief Justice William Kenneth Moore officially swore in Andrekson as a Court of Queen's Bench Justice. Andrekson would serve as a Court of Queen's Bench Justice for over a decade, becoming a Supernumerary Justice of the Court on 21 February 1996 until September 1997, just a year away from retirement. <p>Andrekson married fellow University of Alberta student Margaret Joan Weir in 1949. Together they had five children, Sally, Jim, Janie, John and Peter. Alexander Andrekson passed away on 12 December 1997.</p>

Begg, Alexander

  • glen-222
  • Personne
  • 1825-1905

Alexander Begg, 1825-1905, was born in Scotland, where he received a teaching diploma. In 1846, he emigrated to Ontario where he resumed teaching. In 1854, he turned to journalism and established a number of newspapers. He married Emily Maria Luke, ?-1932, in 1858 and they had eleven children. One of their sons, Magnus, became agent at the Blackfoot (Siksika) Indian Agency in Alberta. For a number of years Alexander was employed by the Department of Internal Revenue and was Collector of Customs for the North-West Territories in 1869. In 1872 he was appointed Emigration Commissioner in Scotland for the Province of Ontario and persuaded thousands of crofters to settle in Canada. He later attempted to promote a similar scheme as Commissioner for the British Columbia government but this was abandoned as impractical. In the 1870s he established a temperance colony at Parry Sound and Beggsboro. In 1881, he visited the West as a Toronto Mail correspondent. He then acquired the Dunbow Ranche near Davisburg and High River, Alberta in 1883. In 1887 he moved to Victoria where he and three of his sons later formed the Stickeen and Teslin Railway, Navigation and Colonization Co. The following year he was employed by the Dominion Government to assist in defining the Canada-Alaska border. He retired to New York City in 1903. For further information see Jill Wade's entry, "Alexander Begg", in the Dictionary of Canadian Biography, vol. XIII. - Toronto : University of Toronto Press, 1994, p. 56-58.

Christie, Alexander Graham

Alexander Graham Christie, 1880-1964, was born in Manchester, Ontario, and received a degree in mechanical and electrical engineering from the University of Toronto. In 1901 he emigrated to Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA, and in 1918 became a naturalized citizen. He worked for the Westinghouse Machine Co., taught for a year at Cornell University, and in 1905 moved to Wisconsin to work for Allis-Chalmers Co. While in this company's employ he helped build the Western Canadian Cement and Coal Co. cement plant at Exshaw, Alberta. In 1909 he became associate professor of engineering at the University of Wisconsin, and in 1914 joined the School of Engineering at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, Maryland. He became director of the School in 1917 and retired in 1948. He wrote a number of engineering handbooks and was a member of numerous societies. He married Flora Brown of Ohio in 1919 and they had two children, Peter and Catherine.

McQuarrie, Alexander Hugh

Alexander Hugh McQuarrie, 1874-1966, was born in Toney River, Nova Scotia, and moved with his family to Saskatchewan in 1893. In 1903 he joined the Canadian Pacific Railway (CPR) as a bridge carpenter and in 1908 the Alberta Department of Public Works. He helped build a road to Whitecourt, and the Edson to Grande Prairie trail. McQuarrie was resident engineer in Grande Prairie, Alberta from 1922 to 1939. After retirement he lived in Edmonton, Peterborough and New Hampshire. He and his wife had three children, Betty (Hanna), Allan F., and A. MacRae.

McGillivray, Alexander

Alexander McGillivray was born in London, Ontario on Februrary 11, 1884. He was educated at St. Francis College and Dalhousie University where he received his LL.B. in 1906. After moving to Alberta in 1907 he practiced in Stettler before moving to the firm of Tweedie and McGillivray in Calgary in 1910. He was appointed King's Counsel in Februray, 1919. Prior to his appointment to the Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of Alberta in 1931, he was active in politics, and was the Conservative leader for the province from 1926-1929. He was appointed to the Royal Commission inquiring into the Alberta oil industry in 1939/1940. He is also known as the judge on the Hunger March case, R. vs. Stewart, in which he overturned a jury decision to convict a man of being a member of an unlawful assembly when he gathered with others on a "hunger march" in Edmonton in 1932. Justice McGillivray died on December 12th, 1940. See HISTORY database for a more complete biography.

Sims, Alexander

  • wet
  • Personne

Alex Sims (1885 - 1983) and Herb Brown met in Edmonton as mechanics. They decided to set up a business and in 1917 moved to Wetaskiwin. In 1920, they rented a new building on Pearce Street and Sims-Brown became the agents for Ford Motor Cars. Alex was on City Council from 1942 - 1946. Sims and Brown sold out to Harold Ingles in 1945. Mr. Ingles operated the business for a number of years before selling the building to W.H. Odell who converted the space into a drug store. After selling his business, Alex Sims and his wife Leah (1913-1983) remained in Wetaskiwin for the rest of their lives. Both died in 1983.

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