- Gordon Gibson, Sr.
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Gordon Gibson Sr. (1904 – 1956) was a prominent business leader and politician in British Columbia. He represented Lillooet in the Legislative Assembly of British Columbia from 1953 to 1956 as a Liberal.
Gibson was a millionaire timber baron[1] whose nickname was "Bull of the Woods" due to his loud lumberjack's voice. He was dismissed as a rough, hard-drinking logger who had made it rich, but was loved by many small loggers as being one of the only people to be interested in them over the interests of big business.
He was born at Gold Bottom Creek near Dawson City, Yukon. His father was working a small mining claim while his mother was the camp cook. The claim failed and according to Gordon, he and his brother Clarke were taken out of the Yukon in an orange crate.[2] In the 1920s, he and his brothers ran the Gibson Lumber and Shingle Company. During the depression, they were active around Vancouver Island, Vancouver and Seattle.[3] The Gibson brothers built a $4,000,000 sawmill business starting at Nootka Sound on the west coast of Vancouver Island. They had more than 40 boats working the Inside Passage including the five masted 2,000 ton bald headed schooner, the Malahat. The Gibson family also owned a radio station in North Vancouver and a whaling station at Coal Harbour. Gibson ended up with a 132 foot pleasure boat called the Norsal which he re-named the Maui Lu (after his first wife, Louise) and sailed it to his resort on Maui. At his resort, Gibson had a totem pole which he had arranged to fly out from Nootka Sound to Maui. At its base was an inscription written in concrete that claimed that it was the first totem pole to fly the Pacific.[2]
He was one of four MLAs who managed to get elected in the June 9, 1953 election when the Liberals received 23% of the vote. In the Lillooet riding, Gibson received 27.63% on the first count (in a preferential ballot) but on the third and final count edged out CCF rival Gordon Dowding with 51.93%.
In 1967, Gordon Gibson was appointed a member of the Northwest Territories Council.[2]
Later in life, he married Ms. Gertrude Schneider and together they ran a hotel on Maui with a restaurant that was very popular.
Gordon Gibson died of lung cancer in 1986.
His son, Gordon Gibson, Jr. led the provincial Liberals in the 1970s.
References
- ^ Macdonald, Ian; O'Keefe, Betty (1997). The Mulligan Affair: Top Cop on the Take. Heritage House Publishing Co. p. 153. ISBN 1895811457. http://books.google.ca/books?id=RDRtsoB0uNoC&pg=PA153&lpg=PA153. Retrieved 2011-11-18.
- ^ a b c Wake, Val (Autumn 1973). Arctic in Colour. Government of Northwest Territories.
- ^ Gibson, Gordon; Renison, Carol (2000). Bull of the woods: the Gordon Gibson story. Douglas & McIntyre. ISBN 155054781X. http://books.google.ca/books?id=FsxZkcMuQvIC.
Categories:- British Columbia politician stubs
- British Columbia Liberal Party MLAs
- Businesspeople in timber
- Deaths from lung cancer
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