Wilfred George Brown Explained

Wilfred George Brown
Office:Commissioner of Yukon
Primeminister:Louis St. Laurent
Term Start:November 5, 1952
Term End:June 8, 1955
Predecessor:Frederick Fraser
Successor:Frederick Howard Collins
Birth Date:March 1906
Birth Place:Moosomin, Saskatchewan
Death Place:Toronto, Ontario
Restingplace:Mount Pleasant Cemetery, Toronto
Citizenship:Canadian
Occupation:Lawyer[1]

Wilfred George Brown (March 1906 – August 23, 1970) was the commissioner of Yukon from 1952 to 1955.

Brown was born in Moosomin, Saskatchewan, in 1906. His father was James Thomas Brown,[2] Chief Justice of the Saskatchewan supreme court for thirty-nine years.[3] [4] Brown attended the University of Saskatchewan, studying law. He later practised law in Regina and served in World War II. W.G. Brown was a district administrator in the Northwest Territory before being appointed Yukon Commissioner. Brown succeeded Frederick Fraser as Yukon Commissioner in November 1952. In 1953 he agreed to a motion passed by the territorial council that reinstated the position of territorial secretary, with W.D. Robertson being given the post. In 1953 Brown legally designated McLean Lake and all land within from its shore as a game sanctuary, the only game sanctuary that the Yukon government created without prompting. In 1955 Brown was replaced by Frederick Howard Collins.

On 13 June 1957 Brown, then chief of the territorial division of the Department of Northern Affairs and National Resources, was made deputy commissioner of the Northwest Territories council.

The W.G. Brown Building/Astro Hill Complex is a two-building structure in Iqaluit, Nunavut, and at eight floors is the largest and among the tallest buildings in the city.

Brown died August 23, 1970, in Toronto after a series of strokes.[5] He was buried August 26 in Mount Pleasant Cemetery, Toronto.[5] [2]

Sources

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Precambrian. 1954.
  2. News: Wilfrid Brown Dies at 64. August 25, 1970. Regina Leader-Post. May 1, 2019.
  3. Web site: Canada 1906 Census. July 1906. May 1, 2019.
  4. Web site: The Honourable James T. Brown. Courts of Saskatchewan. May 1, 2019.
  5. News: Ottawa Citizen. August 24, 1970.