Fred Davis (politician)

Alfred Thomas "Fred" Davis (March 26, 1868 July 24, 1945) was a farmer and a politician on the federal and provincial level in Canada. He was born in 1868 in Mitchell, Ontario to William J. Davis and Tabitha Worth. He married Margaret Davidson in 1898.[1]

Fred Davis
Davis pictured in The Calgary Daily Herald, September 19, 1925
Member of the Canadian Parliament
for Calgary East
In office
1925–1926
Preceded byWilliam Irvine
Succeeded byHerbert Bealey Adshead
Member of the Legislative Assembly of Alberta
In office
June 7, 1917  July 18, 1921
Preceded byJohn Peter McArthur
Succeeded byJohn Buckley
ConstituencyGleichen
Personal details
Born
Alfred Thomas Davis

(1868-03-26)March 26, 1868
Mitchell, Ontario
DiedJuly 24, 1945(1945-07-24) (aged 77)
Calgary, Alberta
Political partyConservative
SpouseMargaret J. Davidson (1898–1914; her death)

Political career

Davis first began his political career as a municipal councilor in his home town of Mitchell, Ontario. He later became the towns Mayor.

Davis ran for a seat in the Legislative Assembly of Alberta in the 1917 Alberta general election as a Conservative. He defeated Liberal incumbent John Peter McArthur and former Governor of Kansas John Leedy in a hotly contested election.[2]

Davis served one term in the Alberta Legislature before retiring from provincial politics in 1921.

Davis ran for the House of Commons of Canada in the 1925 Canadian federal election. He defeated incumbent Member of Parliament William Irvine. Davis was defeated a year later by Herbert Adshead in the 1926 Canadian federal election.

He died in Calgary after a long illness in 1945 and was buried in his hometown of Mitchell, Ontario.[3]

References

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