Gordon Chown Explained

Gordon Campbell Chown
Birth Date:15 August 1922
Birth Place:Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada
Death Place:Brantford, Ontario, Canada[1]
Spouse:Catherine Oliver Barton (m. 1959)
Office:Alderman, City of Winnipeg
Term Start:1952
Term End:1955
Riding2:Winnipeg South
Term Start2:10 June 1957
Term End2:8 April 1963
Predecessor2:Owen Trainor
Successor2:Margaret Konantz
Profession:Barrister, lawyer
Party:Progressive Conservative

Gordon Campbell Chown (15 August 1922 – 31 July 2002) was a Progressive Conservative member of the House of Commons of Canada. He was born in Winnipeg, Manitoba, the son of physician (Stanley) Gordon Chown and his wife Penelope Millen, and became a lawyer.

He served overseas in the army during the Second World War and attained the rank of captain. He served as president of the Young Conservatives of Manitoba (1951) and as an alderman of Winnipeg (1952 to 1955).

He was elected to represent the Winnipeg South riding in the upset 1957 general election, then re-elected in the landslide 1958 election and in the minority 1962 election. He lost his seat to Liberal challenger Margaret Konantz in the 1963 election, which also saw a Liberal minority government replace the Conservative one. Chown served in the 23rd to 25th Canadian Parliaments. During his last term in the House of Commons, he served as Deputy Speaker and chairman of the Committee of the Whole.

After leaving federal politics, Chown moved to Toronto. He helped to found the York County Legal Aid Plan. In 1972 he was appointed as an Ontario provincial judge, acting in this capacity in Toronto and Hamilton until his retirement in 1992.

On 29 December 1959, he married Catherine Oliver Barton, and adopted her three children. He was a lifelong member of the Anglican Church of Canada, as well as a life member of the Royal Canadian Military Institute, Toronto, and of the University of Manitoba Alumni Association. As a past member of the Royal Lake of the Woods Yacht Club and Winnipeg Winter Club, he was an avid sailor and figure skater.

He died in Brantford, Ontario on 31 July 2002, fifteen days before his eightieth birthday.

References

  1. Web site: Gordon Campbell Chown (1922–2002) . 2008-10-23 . Manitoba Historical Society .