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Box 15-021 LETTER TO ALEX. GOW FROM T.B. McQUESTEN
Jan 26 1945
To: Lieut. Alex. Gow Halifax, Nova Scotia
From: 69 James Street South Hamilton, Ontario

69 James Street South
Hamilton
Jan 26th 1945

Dear Alex.

I was very much pleased indeed to receive your letter of Jan 16th and a few days later the Ensign which came in perfect condition. I want to hang it in the Church and I do not see any reason why it should not be done but it will be some little time before we are ready and if we should not do it you can advise me.

I note what you say about the Ensign you flew on "D" day. I entirely sympathize with your officer and crew in their desire to treasure this but if it should so happen that some accident or decision is to put the ship out of Commission that should make it available in the future our Church should be a nice place to hang it.

I want to say to you Alex. how much pleasure it gives me to see you taking your position in your day and generation which your forbears have taken in theirs. I went to school with your uncles Jack and Bob, and what a bonny, charming lady your mother was. Your father was my good friend. He fell into misfortune and circumstances proved too much for him although I never could see any fault in him. And mind you these things happen in life and that is all there is to it.

However you had a great break and it is a delight to me that you have made good and that one of our old pioneer families in this Province is so well represented and that you are taking your place. You can rest assured you have many friends who are just as interested as I am in your career and we are all pulling for you and wish you all possible good fortune. When the war is over and if and when it might be possible that you should be interested in some civilian calling, if you need any assistance or advice; please do not hesitate to call upon me at any time. In the meantime I should be delighted to hear from you from time to time. Good Luck.

Faithfully yours.

T.B. McQuesten [signature]1
Lieut. Alex Gow.
Fleet Mail Office
Halifax, N.S. 2

Letter Envelope is addressed to:
Lieut. Alex. Gow
H.M.C.S. Kenora
Fleet Mail Office,
Halifax
Nova Scotia
Canada


1 This is one of three letters in Mr. Douglas Gow's possession, which he donated to be digitized here: Box 15-019; Box 15-020; Box 15-021. donated on May 2, 2014 by Douglas Ross Gow, and his wife Beverley Gow, both of Brantford, Ontario. They provide a brief history of the Gow family below.


2
Douglas Ross Gow is the son of Alexander Murray Gow and Marion Elizabeth Gow (nee Ross). The "bonny" mother mentioned in the letter is Alex.'s mother: Ursula Whitten Gow (nee Wright).
Douglas Ross Gow, is the son of Alexander Gow whose father and Thomas Baker McQuesten were friends, and he is mentioned in this letter.
Peter Gow (see biography below) is the father of "Jack and Bob" who were Alexander Gow's uncles also mentioned in the letter, and Tom McQuesten mentions going to school with them.
Alexander's father was George Gow and he was Tom McQuesten's "good friend" as Tom states in the letter. Peter Gow (biography below) is the grandfather of Alex. to whom T.B. McQuesten is writing.

NOTE:

DICTIONARYOF CANADIAN BIOGRAPHY

Source: Library and Archives

GOW, PETER,
businessman, politician, and officeholder; b. 20 Nov. 1818 at Johnstone (Strathclyde), Scotland, second son of John Gow (a descendant of Niel Gow, a well-known 18th-century Perthshire violinist) and Agnes Ferguson; m. 29 Dec. 1857 Mary Maxwell Smith of Kirkcudbright (Dumfries and Galloway), Scotland, and they had nine sons and three daughters; d. 24 Feb. 1886 in Guelph, Ont.

After education at a private school, Peter Gow worked with his father, a shoe manufacturer. Immigrating to Canada West in 1842 to improve his position, he spent two years at Brockville and then settled in Guelph. He built woollen and oatmeal mills on the Speed River to serve the developing area, but leather was his chief interest. By 1853 he had a tannery "in full operation" and a store stocked with boots and shoes which he sold "cheap for cash" or exchanged for country produce. Gow remained in business until 1868 when he leased his factories and retired in comfortable circumstances.

Gow was active in municipal affairs in Guelph as a member of the committee founding a mechanics' institute in 1850, as an elected school trustee in 1852, and as a town councillor in 1855. He accompanied the reeve to Toronto in December 1855 to obtain incorporation and establish ward divisions for Guelph. He was elected alderman for the south ward, deputy reeve, and representative to the county council in 1856. The next year Gow became reeve and in 1858 was again elected alderman, but he lost the mayoralty contest of 1859. Re-election as alderman for the south ward in 1863, 1864, and 1865 was followed by two terms as mayor in 1866 and 1867, during which time the town of 6,000 persons erected its first street lights and observed its 40th birthday.

Elected for Wellington South to the first Ontario Legislative Assembly in 1867, Gow firmly opposed John Sandfield Macdonald's coalition government, condemning the "mawkish cry" of "no politics" and declaring that "the only correct government was a party government." Although he spoke little in the legislature, dedicated attention to the needs of his constituents won him re-election by acclamation in 1871 and 1875, while political loyalty earned him the office of provincial secretary in December 1871 in the new liberal government of Edward Blake. He was replaced in that post by Timothy Blair Pardee on 25 Oct. 1872 when Oliver Mowat succeeded Blake as premier. Conservatives complained that "poor Peter Gow," the "only honest man in the late Ministry," had been cast aside "like an old glove." They later suggested that his departure from the cabinet was eased by transferring the site of the proposed agricultural college (later the Ontario Agricultural College) from Mimico to Guelph in 1873. In the assembly, however, Gow claimed that he had opposed the move until convinced of the unsuitability of the former Mimico site; he also insisted that his retirement from the cabinet was an entirely unrelated "personal matter." The premier may have preferred the more influential Pardee as provincial secretary, but there is no evidence of a bargain between Mowat and Gow. The latter probably had asked, as the Globe reported, for relief from responsibility because of health problems which eventually caused him to resign his seat in 1876. He then accepted the less demanding shrievalty of Wellington County. He continued as sheriff until his death.

True to his Scottish heritage, Gow was a Presbyterian, and a curling club president. He was a charter member in 1868 and a manager of Chalmer's Church. Charles Clarke described him as a splendid organizer and effective worker, "essentially a man of the people." Gow contributed to the commercial prosperity and social progress of Guelph in the mid 19th century. He helped revive party government in Ontario after confederation and establish the long Liberal administration beginning in 1871.
A. Margaret Evans
Ont., Legislative Library, Newspaper Hansard, 1867-77 (mfm. at AO). Globe, 31 Dec. 1867, 26 Oct. 1872, 11 March 1873. The annals of the town of Guelph, 1827-1877, comp. C. A. Burrows (Guelph, Ont., 1877), 63-158. Canadian biog. dict., I: 752-55. CPC, 1876: 387. DNB (entry for Niel Gow). Charles Clarke, Sixty years in Upper Canada, with autobiographical recollections (Toronto, 1908), 159, 180-81. General Bibliography. 1982-2014 University of Toronto.




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The development of this website was directed by Mary Anderson, Ph.D. and Janelle Baldwin, M.A.
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