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Alexander Grant MacKay
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{{short description|Canadian politician (1860–1920)}} {{Use Canadian English|date=January 2023}} {{Infobox officeholder | name = Alexander Grant MacKay | image = Alexander Grant MacKay.jpg | office1 = Member of the [[Legislative Assembly of Alberta]] | predecessor1 = [[Jean Côté]] | successor1 = [[George Mills (politician)|George Mills]] | term_start1 = 1913 | term_end1 = 1920 | constituency1 = [[Athabasca (Alberta provincial electoral district)|Athabasca]] | office2 = [[Member of Provincial Parliament (Ontario)|Ontario MPP]] | predecessor2 = [[George Milward Boyd]] | successor2 = [[Colin Stewart Cameron]] | term_start2 = 1902 | term_end2 = 1913 | constituency2 = [[Grey North (provincial electoral district)|Grey North]] | party = [[Alberta Liberal Party]] | otherparty = [[Ontario Liberal Party]] | birth_date = {{birth date|1860|3|7}} | birth_place = Sydenham, Canada West | death_date = {{death date and age|1920|4|25|1860|3|7}} | death_place = Edmonton, Alberta | nationality = [[Canadians|Canadian]] | spouse = | children = | occupation = }} '''Alexander Grant MacKay''' (March 7, 1860 – April 25, 1920) was a [[Canadians|Canadian]] teacher, lawyer and provincial level politician. He served prominent posts in two provincial legislatures as Leader of the Opposition in Ontario and as a Cabinet Minister in Alberta. ==Early life== Alexander Grant MacKay was born in [[Sydenham, Grey County, Ontario|Sydenham, Canada West]], in [[Grey County]] on March 7, 1860, to parents Hugh MacKay and Katherine McInnis. He attended post secondary studies at the [[Owen Sound College]] and the [[University of Toronto]] obtaining a Master of Business degree. After university he became the principal of [[Port Rowan High School]]. In 1891 he joined the Ontario bar and served as a criminal lawyer until 1894, when he became Crown Attorney for Grey County. He served that role until 1912. MacKay began his political career on the municipal level with his election to the [[Owen Sound, Ontario|Owen Sound]] Board of Education in 1894. He served in that role until he entered Ontario provincial politics in 1902.<ref>{{cite web | url = http://www.ourfutureourpast.ca/newspapr/np_page2.asp?code=n99p1157.jpg | archive-url = https://archive.today/20120908024147/http://www.ourfutureourpast.ca/newspapr/np_page2.asp?code=n99p1157.jpg | url-status = dead | archive-date = September 8, 2012 | title = Hon. A. G. MacKay dies in Hospital Following Attack of Pneumonia | publisher = Calgary Herald | date = April 26, 1920 | accessdate = 2007-08-12 }}</ref> ==Ontario politics== MacKay ran and was elected to the Ontario [[legislature]] in 1902 in the riding of [[Grey North (provincial electoral district)|Grey North]]. He was re-elected in 1905, 1908 and 1911. He served in the government of [[Premier]] Ross as Commissioner of Crown Lands until the government's defeat in 1905. On September 7, 1907 MacKay was elected leader of the [[Ontario Liberal Party]] and [[Leader of the Opposition (Ontario)|Leader of the Opposition]] and held that position until he resigned in September 1911. MacKay moved to Alberta in the spring of 1912, he was accused by the Toronto press of leaving Ontario because he was unable to get along with new Liberal opposition leader [[Newton Rowell]]. MacKay officially resigned his seat in the Ontario Legislature when he ran in the [[1913 Alberta general election]] on April 12, 1913. ==Alberta politics== [[Image:Alexander Grant MacKay cartoon.jpg|left|250px|The Toronto Press Lampooning A.G. MacKay for moving west]] MacKay ran for the [[Legislative Assembly of Alberta]] for the first time in the [[1913 Alberta general election]] resigning his Ontario Legislature seat as soon as the writ was dropped. MacKay ran in the [[Edmonton (provincial electoral district)|Edmonton]] electoral district and was defeated finishing a very close 3rd place in the block vote. After his defeat he then ran as the candidate in the deferred [[Athabasca (Alberta provincial electoral district)|Athabasca]] election on July 30, 1913. In his second attempt at office he defeated Conservative candidate Mayor of Athabasca James Wood by a comfortable margin to win his first term in office. MacKay spent his first term in the Legislature as a back bencher for the government. MacKay stood for re-election in the [[1917 Alberta general election]]. This time he was returned to his second term in a landslide victory over Conservative candidate A.F. Fugl. MacKay was appointed to the provincial cabinet on August 26, 1918. He assumed the portfolio of Minister of Municipal Affairs from [[Wilfrid Gariépy]]. He was confirmed to his portfolio in a ministerial by-election on September 27, 1918, which he won by acclamation. MacKay was given a second portfolio on June 19, 1919, when he was appointed as Alberta's first Minister of Health. He served both portfolios until he died of pneumonia (arising from the Spanish flu) in the Edmonton General Hospital April 25, 1920.<ref>{{cite web | url = http://www.ourfutureourpast.ca/newspapr/np_page2.asp?code=n99p1143.jpg | title = MacKay's Death Severe Blow to Stewart Cabinet | publisher = Calgary Herald | date = April 26, 1920 | accessdate = 2007-08-12 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20150924100705/http://www.ourfutureourpast.ca/newspapr/np_page2.asp?code=n99p1143.jpg | archive-date = September 24, 2015 | url-status = dead }}</ref> ==References== {{Reflist}} ==External links== * {{Internet Archive author |sname=Alexander Grant MacKay |sopt=t}} *{{Ontario MPP biography|id=alexander-grant-mackay}} *[https://web.archive.org/web/20101026192825/http://www.assembly.ab.ca/legislaturecentennial/pdf/membersBooklet.pdf Legislative Assembly of Alberta Members Listing] {{s-start}} {{s-ppo}} {{succession box| before=[[George P. Graham]]| title=[[Ontario Liberal Party|Ontario Liberal Leader]]| years=1907–1911| after=[[Newton Rowell]]}} {{s-end}} {{Ontario Liberal Leaders}} {{DEFAULTSORT:Mackay, Alexander Grant}} [[Category:1860 births]] [[Category:1920 deaths]] [[Category:Ontario Liberal Party MPPs]] [[Category:Leaders of the Ontario Liberal Party]] [[Category:University of Toronto alumni]] [[Category:Alberta Liberal Party MLAs]] [[Category:Deaths from pneumonia in Alberta]] [[Category:Members of the Executive Council of Alberta]] [[Category:Deaths from the Spanish flu pandemic in Canada]] [[Category:20th-century members of the Legislative Assembly of Ontario]] [[Category:20th-century members of the Legislative Assembly of Alberta]]
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