- William Alexander Baird
William Alexander Baird (
September 10 1867 –May 30 ,1940 ), commonly referred to as W.A. Baird, was anOntario lawyer andpolitician . He represented High Park in theLegislative Assembly of Ontario as a Conservative from 1926 until his death in 1940.He was born in
Carlisle, Ontario inMiddlesex County to protestant parents of Irish ancestry. As a young man he went toToronto to study law, graduating fromOsgoode Hall in 1890. He received his B.C.L. from Trinity College in 1901 and located toThe Junction where he worked mostly in property law. Baird married Annie M. Gilbert in 1896, but did not have any children.Baird soon became involved in local politics, and successfully ran for
mayor of Toronto Junction in 1907, a position in which he was re-elected the following year. He was instrumental in getting the town incorporated as the City of West Toronto in 1908, and was still mayor when the town was annexed by theCity of Toronto in 1909, making him the only mayor the City of West Toronto ever had.Baird remained involved in politics, joining the
Toronto City Council as an alderman, a position he held until 1912. Drawing on his experience in property law and his interest in recreation, Baird was instrumental in establishing parkspace in the city, particularly in the Junction area. In addition to the park at Keele and Humberside streets which is named in his honour, he also helped establish Beresford Park, a parkette on Gilmour Avenue just north of Annette Street, as well as several tracts in the Davenport area.Following his departure from city council, Baird remained involved in the West York Conservative Association, and was the main in-party opposition to the incumbent
MPP Forbes Godfrey, as the two disagreed on the issue of local option which enabled the ward to impose a ban on alcohol sales. In 1926, Baird was duly put up for the nomination by the Conservatives, and handily won an election as the chief opposition came not from the Liberals, but from the Prohibition Party, who advocated province-wideprohibition . Although a quiet MPP, Baird was re-elected three times, before he died in 1940. He seat subsequently filled in the 1943 election by future-premier George Drew.External links
* [http://www.ontla.on.ca/web/members/members_all_detail.do?locale=en&ID=856 Member's parliamentary history for the Legislative Assembly of Ontario]
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