Edward Leslie Gray Explained

Edward Leslie Gray
Birth Date:April 8, 1895
Birth Place:Maple Valley, Ontario, Canada
Term Start:October 7, 1937
Term End:March 20, 1940
Predecessor:George Van Allen
Successor:Ernest Manning, John P. Page, N. B. James, David Duggan, Hugh John MacDonald
Office1:Leader of the Alberta Liberal Party
Term Start1:1937
Term End1:1940
Predecessor1:William R. Howson
Successor1:James Harper Prowse
Office:Member of the Legislative Assembly of Alberta
Constituency:Edmonton
Party:Liberal
Alma Mater:Ontario Agricultural College
Occupation:politician

Edward Leslie Gray (April 8, 1895 – June 13, 1992) was a politician and member of the Legislative Assembly of Alberta from Alberta, Canada.

Gray was born April 8, 1895, in Maple Valley, Ontario to Samuel Gray and Mary Taylor, both of Irish descent.[1]

Gray was elected in a by-election in the Edmonton after the death of George Van Allen. He also became the Alberta Liberal Party leader in 1937. The by-election was considered the first test of strength for the Alberta Social Credit Party government.

Gray's election marked the beginning of the Unity Movement, despite running under the Liberal banner he was elected with the popular support of Conservatives. He defeated 2 time Edmonton Mayor Joseph Clarke, who ran as a People's Candidate backed by Social Credit, and Communist Leader Jan Lakeman.

Gray served as Alberta Liberal Party leader until 1940, strongly favouring a coalition arrangement with the Conservatives and some former United Farmers of Alberta members against Social Credit. The coalition ran under the name of the Independent Citizens' Association. He ran in Bow Valley in the 1940 Alberta election, but was defeated.

Gray died on June 13, 1992.[2]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Normandin . A. L. . The Canadian Parliamentary Guide . The Canadian Parliamentary Guide = Guide Parlementaire Canadien . 1940 . Mortimer Company Ltd. . Ottawa . August 9, 2020 . 0315-6168 . 893686591 . 381.
  2. Province of Alberta . Legislative Assembly of Alberta . September 21, 1992 . Carter, David J. . David J. Carter . 1781.