- George Harry Webster
George Harry Webster (
2 September 1868 , Leicester,England – 1933) was a politician and transportation expert inAlberta ,Canada .Early life
George Webster emigrated to
Canada with his parents in 1873, settling first inOrangeville, Ontario . He received his early education in Orangeville. In 1880, the family moved on toWinnipeg and he was employed by theCanadian Pacific Railway working on a construction gang building the westward moving line. Mr. Webster arrived inCalgary with the railway in 1883.Transportation career
In 1900, after working in Washington State for several years, he returned to Calgary to assume the management of P. Burns and Company, a post Mr. Webster held through to 1906. He subsequentlyreturned to railway construction and was involved in several large projects, including completion of the
Grand Trunk line between Calgary and Tofield.George became interested in road transportation, and became involved with the "Southern Alberta Good Roads' Association" and the "Calgary Auto Club". He studied western canadian roads, and their impact on tourism, construction and maintaince and the effect on agriculture. [ cite web | url = http://www.ourfutureourpast.ca/newspapr/np_page2.asp?code=NAZp0979.jpg| title = Who's who among political candidates in Calgary | publisher = Calgary Herald June 19, 1926 | accessdate = 2006-10-14 ]
Municipal career
Mr. Webster was elected to
Calgary City Council in 1919 and served for three years. He became Mayor in 1922and held that office for four consecutive one year terms. He tendered his resignation as city mayor to run in the 1926 Alberta general election: it was approved by city council and came into effect onDecember 31 ,1926 . Mr. Webster was popularly known as the "Cowboy Mayor".Provincial career and death
In July 1926, he was elected as a
Alberta Liberal Party member for Calgary in theLegislative Assembly of Alberta [ cite web | url = http://www.calgary.ca/DocGallery/BU/cityclerks/w.pdf | title =City of Calgary Aldermanic Gallery | publisher = City of Calgary Municipal Government | accessdate = 2006-10-08] He was chosen to lead the party into the 1930 provincial election but the party only gained four seats and its popular vote declined slightly in the face of theUnited Farmers of Alberta government. He resigned as party leader in 1932 making way forWilliam R. Howson but retained his seat in the legislature until his death in 1933.References
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