Ambrose Holowach Explained

Ambrose Holowach
Birth Date:22 July 1914
Birth Place:Edmonton, Alberta, Canada
Death Place:Edmonton, Alberta, Canada
Office:Member of the Legislative Assembly of Alberta
Constituency:Edmonton Centre
Term Start:1959
Term End:1971
Successor:Gordon Miniely
Office2:Member of Parliament
Term Start2:1953
Predecessor2:Albert Frederick Macdonald
Term End2:1958
Successor2:William Skoreyko
Constituency2:Edmonton East
Party:Social Credit Party of Canada
Alberta Social Credit Party

Ambrose Holowach (July 22, 1914 – February 27, 1993) was a Canadian businessman, soldier during World War II, member of the Canadian Parliament and member of the Alberta legislative assembly.

Family

Ambrose's father, Sam, was an ethnically Ukrainian immigrant from the Austro-Hungarian Empire. Same homesteaded east of Edmonton before moving into the city to start a laundry business. Ambrose's brother Walter studied violin in Vienna and played in the Edmonton Symphony Orchestra. A horse chestnut tree was planted behind the family business from seed brought from Vienna by Walter. It became a local landmark known as the "Holowach Tree"; saved from redevelopment in 1998, it was still standing as of 2023.[1] [2]

Federal political career

Holowach first ran for a seat in the House of Commons of Canada as a candidate of the Social Credit party in the 1949 federal election. He was defeated by Liberal candidate Albert Frederick Macdonald.

Holowach ran again in the 1953 federal election and this time defeated Macdonald. He remained an MP until Progressive Conservative candidate William Skoreyko defeated him in the 1958 federal election.

Provincial political career

Before he became an MP, Holowach ran for a seat in the Legislative Assembly of Alberta in 1952. He ran in the seven-member electoral district of Edmonton. In the First Count he came in sixth, but without the quota required to win a seat. He would have won a seat if his vote total had increased adequately through transfers conducted under STV, but he received fewer vote transfers than another SC candidate - Edgar Gerhart - who was elected instead of Holowach.

He made another attempt at entering the Alberta Legislature after losing his seat in the House of Commons. He was elected in the Edmonton Centre district in the 1959 general election. In 1962, Premier Ernest Manning appointed him to the Executive Council of Alberta; he became Provincial Secretary. In 1964 he attracted much attention when he said in the legislature that he didn't think Alberta needed a distinct flag. Shortly before the 1971 general election, he was appointed Minister of Culture, Youth and Recreation by Premier Harry Strom.

At the 1971 election, Holowach left the Edmonton Centre district and ran for re-election in the Edmonton-Highlands district. He lost to Progressive Conservative candidate David Thomas King. Holowach ran against King again in the 1975 election but was again defeated.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Holowach Tree | Edmonton Maps Heritage.
  2. Web site: Holowach Tree | Edmonton Maps Heritage.