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・ Ernest Masson Anderson
・ Ernest Masters
・ Ernest Mateen
・ Ernest Mathijs
・ Ernest Matthew Mickler
・ Ernest Maunoury
・ Ernest Maxin
・ Ernest May
・ Ernest May (athlete)
・ Ernest May (historian)
・ Ernest Mayer
・ Ernest McBride, Sr.
・ Ernest McChesney
・ Ernest McCulloch
・ Ernest McFarland
Ernest McGirr
・ Ernest McIntyre
・ Ernest McLean
・ Ernest Mead
・ Ernest Medina
・ Ernest Megginson House
・ Ernest Melville Charles Guest
・ Ernest Melville DuPorte
・ Ernest Menault
・ Ernest Mercier
・ Ernest Mercier (agronomist)
・ Ernest Merlin
・ Ernest Merrill
・ Ernest Merritt
・ Ernest Mesmin Lucien Cabo


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Ernest McGirr : ウィキペディア英語版
Ernest McGirr

Ernest Newburn McGirr, Q.C. (March 7, 1887 – May 23, 1982) was a politician in Manitoba, Canada. He served in the Legislative Assembly of Manitoba as a Progressive Conservative from 1949 to 1953.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=MLA Biographies - Deceased )
Born in Emerson, Manitoba, McGirr was educated in Morden and Winnipeg. He joined a law firm in Dauphin in 1914 and was made a partner in 1916. McGirr married Elizabeth Stewart, of Griswold, near Oak Lake, in 1916. They had two daughters, Nora Elizabeth McGirr Roots Clawson (1917-1989), an editor who was married and later divorced from Peter Charles Roots, the father of her three children (Stephanie Roots Karsten (), Judith Roots Carver (), and David Henry Roots () and then to Robert Marion Clawson; and Kathleen (who married first the Canadian historian Roger Graham and later the distinguished military man Leonard Birchall). McGirr was named a King's Counsel in 1933.〔(【引用サイトリンク】publisher=The Manitoba Historical Society )
McGirr first ran for the Manitoba legislature as a Conservative in the 1932 provincial election, but lost to Liberal-Progressive candidate Robert Hawkins by 265 votes in the Dauphin constituency. He lost to Hawkins again, by a greater margin, in the 1936 election.〔
He was elected to the legislature on his third attempt, in the provincial election of 1949.〔 The Liberal-Progressives and Progressive Conservatives had previously formed a coalition government in Manitoba, and with support from the Liberal-Progressives, McGirr easily defeated an opponent from Cooperative Commonwealth Federation to take the Dauphin constituency.
The Progressive Conservatives left the coalition government in 1950, and McGirr moved to the opposition benches with his party. He was defeated in the 1953 provincial election,〔 placing third against William Bullmore of the Social Credit League. He acted as the Dauphin town solicitor for 50 years prior to his retirement, served on the board of United College in Winnipeg,〔 and was a Bencher (1952–1968) and Life Bencher (1968–1982) of the Law Society of Manitoba.〔(【引用サイトリンク】publisher=The Manitoba Historical Society )
McGirr died in Dauphin at the age of 95.〔
== References ==


抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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