Stanley Harwood McCuaig, CMQC (February 11, 1891 – March 6, 1986), was a prominent Canadian lawyer in Edmonton, Alberta.
Early life and education
McCuaig was born at Bainsville, Ontario, the eldest son of Duncan Donald McCuaig and Catherine (née McIntosh) McCuaig.[1] He attended primary school in Bainsville, and high school in Williamstown and Glencoe.[2] Upon graduation, he briefly attended normal school in Cornwall, Ontario before enrolling in Queen's University at Kingston, Ontario in 1909.[3] An active student, he served as manager for the Queen's University hockey team, First Vice President of the Alma Mater Society, and at various points the orator, secretary, and President of the Arts Association.[3] He graduated with a degree of Bachelor of Arts in 1913.[4]
Stanley first entered military service in January 1917, when he gained entrance to the Royal Canadian Horse Artillery. After training in Kingston and Petawawa, he returned back to Edmonton.[2] On April 20, 1917, at Lethbridge, Alberta McCuaig enlisted in the Canadian Army, joining the Canadian Field Artillery (78th Depot Battery) of the Royal Regiment of Canadian Artillery.[1] He arrived in England in January 1918, and left shortly after for France. He fought on the Western Front with the Canadian Corps until October when he was sent for officers' training in England. He remained in England until the end of the war.[2]
Personal Life and Honors
After the war, McCuaig returned to Edmonton and resumed working with Rutherford. On September 17 1919, McCuaig married Rutherford's daughter, Hazel Rutherford.[5] Together, the couple had four children: two sons and two daughters.[6][7][8][9]
McCuaig and his family were long-time members of First Presbyterian Church of Edmonton.[10] The family were also active in the Edmonton community. Stanley served on the boards of many organizations including the United Way, and as chairman of the board for both the Misrecordia Hospital and of the Sisters of Our Lady in Refuge. In recognition of his service, he was named Edmonton's "citizen of the year" in 1955, was named to the Order of Canada in 1972, and received the Benemerenti medal from Pope Paul VI in 1973.[11][12][2] In 1949, he was awarded an honorary LLD by Queen's University.
Law career
McCuaig practiced with the Rutherford firm for many years, becoming a full partner in 1923.[13] but, in 1939, he left to establish his own firm, McCuaig, Desrochers, Beckingham & McDonald, which continues today as McCuaig Desrochers LLP. In 1948, his son Eric McCuaig joined the firm. McCuaig practiced law in Edmonton for almost 60 years, setting very high practice standards for himself and for the firm.[14]
In 1949 and 1950, McCuaig was the president of the Canadian Bar Association, a voluntary professional association of lawyers across Canada.[15] From 1952-53, he served as the President of the Law Society of Alberta, the regulatory body for lawyers in Alberta. Some twenty years later, his son Eric McCuaig was also elected President of the Law Society.[16]
In 1949, Queen's University awarded him an honorary Doctor of Laws degree.[4] The Dr. Stanley Harwood McCuaig Scholarship is awarded at Queen's Law School to students with high standing in courses in Property Law, Business Associations and Commercial Law.[17]
^Babcock, Douglas R. (1989). Alexander Cameron Rutherford: A Gentleman of Strathcona. Calgary, AB: University of Calgary Press. p. 104. ISBN9780919813571.