Alex Campbell (politician) explained

Alexander Bradshaw Campbell
Order:23rd
Office:Premier of Prince Edward Island
Predecessor:Walter R. Shaw
Successor:W. Bennett Campbell
Term Start:July 28, 1966
Term End:September 18, 1978
Office1:Leader of the Prince Edward Island Liberal Party
Predecessor1:Alex W. Matheson
Successor1:W. Bennett Campbell
Term Start1:December 11, 1965
Term End1:September 18, 1978
Office2:MLA (Councillor) for 5th Prince
Predecessor2:Lorne Monkley
Successor2:Peter Pope
Term Start2:February 9, 1965
Term End2:September 18, 1978
Birth Date:1 December 1933
Birth Place:Summerside, Prince Edward Island, Canada
Party:Liberal
Relations:Thane A. Campbell (father)
Children:3
Residence:Stanley Bridge
Alma Mater:Dalhousie University
Occupation:Lawyer
Profession:Politician
Cabinet:Attorney General (1966–1969)
Minister of Development (1969–1972)
Minister of Agriculture and Forestry (1972–1974)
Minister of Justice and Attorney and Advocate General (1974–1978)
Honorific Prefix:The Honourable
Honorific Suffix:PC, OC, OPEI

Alexander Bradshaw Campbell (born December 1, 1933) is a former politician of Prince Edward Island, Canada. He is the son of former premier Thane A. Campbell and Cecilia L. Bradshaw. He entered politics by winning a seat in the legislature through a 1965 by-election in 5th Prince. Later the same year he was elected leader of the PEI Liberal Party and, in 1966 took the party to power becoming, at 32, one of the youngest premiers ever elected in Canada. He also held the position of Attorney-General from 1966 until 1969.[1]

Education

Campbell attended Dalhousie University, where he earned a Bachelor of Arts degree and a law degree, and, in 1959, he passed the bar in Prince Edward Island. In 1971 he was recognized as a "Significant Sig" by the Sigma Chi fraternity, of which he is a member.

Political career

Campbell's government attempted to strengthen the province's economy and improve social conditions by instituting programs such as assistance to homeowners and homebuilders. His government also revamped the educational system and established the PEI Heritage Foundation. He also started the Land Development Corporation and the PEI Lending Authority to help develop the economy. The government also brought in controls on absentee ownership of land.

Legal career

Campbell left politics in 1978 to sit on the province's Supreme Court. Campbell delivered judgment in Government of P.E.I. v Walker in 1992, whose 1995 appeal has been cited in more than fifty subsequent cases.[2]

Personal life

A long-time resident of his hometown of Summerside, Campbell was a member of Scouts Canada and later served as a Scout Leader. In his retirement, Campbell now resides in Stanley Bridge during the summer months and is a part-time winter resident of St. Petersburg, Florida, where he has organized a "Prince Edward Island Picnic" at Desoto Park on the second Sunday of March every year since 2000.

Campbell was appointed to the Order of Canada in 2013.[3]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Alexander Bradshaw Campbell. Premiers Gallery. Government of Prince Edward Island. 2009-05-27. https://web.archive.org/web/20090522143342/http://www.gov.pe.ca/premiersgallery/alexcamp.php3. 22 May 2009 . live.
  2. Web site: May 23, 1995. Walker v. Prince Edward Island, 1995 CanLII 92 (SCC), [1995] 2 SCR 407]. The Canadian Legal Information Institute.
  3. Web site: Governor General Announces 74 New Appointments to the Order of Canada. 29 June 2013.