John Allen McPherson | |
Birth Date: | 28 December 1855 |
Birth Place: | Mount Pleasant, Ontario |
Death Place: | Vancouver, British Columbia |
Office: | Member of the Legislative Assembly of Alberta |
Constituency: | Stony Plain |
Term Start: | 1905 |
Term End: | 1913 |
Successor: | Conrad Weidenhammer |
Party: | Liberal |
John Allen McPherson (December 28, 1855 – December 26, 1944) was a Canadian provincial level politician in Alberta.[1]
John Allen McPherson was born December 28, 1855, at Mount Pleasant, Ontario to Donald and Catharine McPherson of Scottish descent.[2] McPherson moved west in the spring of 1878, spending three years in Kenora working on the Canadian Pacific Railway[2] He traveled to Edmonton in May 1881 via 105 day ox and cart journey and quickly moved to his selected homestead where he began farming and livestock breeding.[2] He married Christina Hodel on April 22, 1894, had six children together.[2]
McPherson was the director of the Edmonton Exhibition Association from 1901, a town councillor in 1905, school board trustee from 1895, postmaster for Spruce Grove and Justice of the Peace.[2]
McPherson was first elected as an original member of the Legislative Assembly of Alberta for the electoral district of Stony Plain in the 1905 Alberta general election for the Alberta Liberal Party defeating Dan Bronx of the Conservatives and future Conservative MLA Conrad Weidenhammer who ran as an Independent.[3] He served the Alberta Liberal Party as a back bencher.
McPherson would win a second term to office in Stony Plain in the 1909 Alberta general election in another hotly contested election against three other opponents.[4]
In the 1913 Alberta general election, he would be defeated and retired from politics after being handily defeated by Conservative Conrad Weidenhammer.[5]