- John Anderson-Thompson
John Anderson-Thompson was born in Glengairn,
Scotland and enlisted in the Royal Flying Corps. at 16 duringWorld War I . [McGrath, T.: "The Commissioner’s Award for Public Service". The Canadian Surveyor, September 1975.] In 1920, he came toCanada , working as a sheep farmer inSaskatchewan . In 1926, Anderson-Thompson returned to Scotland, meeting and marrying Janet Grant of Braemer Village. They moved back to the Praries in 1932, with Anderson-Thompson graduating from the University of Saskatchewan in 1936 as a Geological Engineer. In 1942, he joined theRCAF and was posted to Rivers, Manitoba, as a navigation instructor until 1944. John and Janet moved to Yellowknife,Northwest Territories in 1944. Anderson-Thompson worked as a Dominion Land Surveyor, selecting the route for the Mackenzie Highway between Yellowknife and Hay River, as well as the locations of the Distant Early Warning (DEW) stations, accompanied more often than not by Janet, who contributed to the travels by sketch mapping as they went. [cite web |title = Northwest Territories Timeline |publisher = Prince of Wales Northern Heritage Centre | url = http://www.pwnhc.ca/timeline/1950/1959_YKHighway.htm |accessdate = 2007-12-17 ] He was also commissioned as the Captain and Commanding Officer of No. 7 Company of theCanadian Rangers based out of Yellowknife, as well as theJustice of the Peace and actingMagistrate . He was the leader of the No. 7 Rangers inOperation Bulldog III . Anderson-Thompson died in 1985.References
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