- Clarence Milligan
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Clarence Adam Milligan Member of Parliament
for Prince Edward—LennoxIn office
June 1957 – June 1968Personal details Born 12 February 1904
Tamworth, OntarioDied by January 1989[1]
Napanee, OntarioPolitical party Progressive Conservative Spouse(s) Annie Margaret Milligan ( nee Gilmour) Profession farmer Religion Christian Clarence Adam Milligan (12 February 1904 - unknown, fl. 1992) was a Progressive Conservative party member of the Canadian House of Commons. He was a farmer by career.
Milligan was born at Tamworth, Ontario. He was first elected at the Prince Edward—Lennox riding in the 1957 general election, after defeating incumbent parliamentarian George Tustin for the Progressive Conservative nomination.[2] He was elected to a second term there in the 1958 election then left federal politics at the end of the 24th Canadian Parliament. He made another attempt to return to the House of Commons in the 1968 election at Frontenac—Lennox and Addington as an independent candidate affiliated with the Progressive Conservatives, but was defeated by Almonte Douglas Alkenbrack.
Milligan also served as a president of the Ontario Federation of Agriculture and was living in Napanee in the early 1990s. He owned what is now the developed part of the Town of Napanee. His death reportedly occurred before by 1995.[1][3]
References
- ^ a b Rafter, Jack (21 January 1995). "Many attractions found in Napanee". Kingston Whig-Standard. p. 2. Refers to the MP as "late Clarence Milligan".
- ^ Milligan won on the second ballot, after the withdrawal of a third candidate, Napanee Mayor Douglas Alkenbrack. See "Friend of Tory leader is rejected in Napanee", Toronto Star, 18 April 1957, p. 2. The nomination defeat is also mentioned in Ian Stewart, Just One Vote: Jim Walding's nomination to constitutional defeat, (Winnipeg: University of Manitoba Press), 2009, p. 7.
- ^ Whitty, Reg (9 September 1992). "Grandfather Clarence Milligan a proud spectator at Centreville". Kingston Whig-Standard. p. 1.
External links
Categories:- 1904 births
- 1990s deaths
- Canadian farmers
- Members of the Canadian House of Commons from Ontario
- People from Lennox and Addington County, Ontario
- Progressive Conservative Party of Canada MPs
- Progressive Conservative Party of Canada, Ontario MP stubs
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