Stuart Liptay

Remembering Canada's 17th Prime Minister John Turner

Remembering Canada's 17th Prime Minister John Turner

On June 12, 2010 the RB Bennett Commemorative Centre opened at the Museum in honor of Canada’s 11th Prime Minister the Right Honorable Richard Bedford Bennett. On hand as guest speaker at the event was Canada’s 17th Prime Minster the Right Honorable John Turner.

Now it might seem strange that a Liberal Prime Minister such as John Turner would take part in the opening of a centre dedicated to a Conservative Prime Minster, but that was the type of man that was John Turner. He recognized the role that Bennett played in Canadian life and was there to pay him tribute.

At the time of the Grand Opening Mr. Turner had just turned 81 years old and he regaled the audience with his families connection to RB Bennett. Mr. Turner said::

As a boy growing up in Ottawa in the 1930s, it was my good fortune to meet Richard Bedford Bennett, Canada's 11th prime minister, on many occasions. I recall a friendly man with a booming voice who gave me chocolates once in a while.

A man with progressive views for his time about women, he was responsible for bringing my late mother, Phyllis Gregory (later Ross), into Canada's public service during the Great Depression. She soon rose through the ranks, a single woman with two young children to raise, and became the senior-ranked female public servant in the land.

For the rest of her life, my mother respected and admired Bennett for this and his countless contributions to Canada. Like me today, she never understood as time went on the largely negative portrayal he received before history - when he's even been considered at all.

John Turner like RB Bennett saw his party go down in defeat during his tenure as leader, mainly due to circumstances beyond their control. We would like to thank John Turner for his many years of service to the Canadian people and for his warmly felt words at our Grand Opening ceremony 10 years ago.

Thank you sir.

We will be lowing the Bennett Flag to half-mast in his honor.

Creation of Albert County Passed Provincial Legislature 175 Years Ago - March 27, 1845

Creation of Albert County Passed Provincial Legislature 175 Years Ago - March 27, 1845

The 175th Anniversary of the passing of the Albert County Act was recognized in the New Brunswick Provincial Legislature on Friday, March 27, 2020. The Act to form our county was passed by the Provincial Legislature on March 27, 1845, and did not become law until it was passed by the Queen’s Council in London, England on August 8, 1845. Thank you to our MLA Minister Mike Holland, who announced greetings and congratulations on March 11, 2020 from the floor of the Legislature. The Original Act is included in this post. You will notice that sections are “X’d” out, and this is because when an act is updated, the repealed text is shown with the most current version.

Albert County 175 - Photo A Day 2020 - March 9, 2020

Albert County 175 - Photo A Day 2020 - March 9, 2020

March Break is over and it’s back to school Monday with a photo of Hebron School. The school was never very large, and was rarely used after about 1926. The B&W photo shows (click on link) actual glass in the windows, so is considerably older than the colour slide of it, taken about 1980.

Albert County 175 - Photo A Day 2020 - March 8, 2020

Albert County 175 - Photo A Day 2020 - March 8, 2020

On International Women’s Day we give you one of the great women from Albert County. Mary Majka - Born in Poland in 1925 (d.2014) to a Czechoslovakian countess and a Polish school principal, It was in Albert County. New Brunswick that she would finally feel at home and it was there that Mary would begin her life’s work, saving wildlife environments, preserving historic sites, and educating Canadians about the natural world.

Albert County 175 - Photo A Day 2020 - March 4, 2020

Albert County 175 - Photo A Day 2020 - March 4, 2020

Three for one special today, of a Sugar Camp in 1921 (99 years ago!) because when the sap is running you make maple syrup. You’ll have to click the link to see the other two. These photos were taken by Joanna West and show the Stevens Sugar Camp on Apr 4th 1921. The camp was located in Rosevale Albert Co.