James Grassick

James Grassick (March 2, 1868[1] August 4, 1956[2]) was a businessman and political figure in Saskatchewan, Canada. He represented Regina City in the Legislative Assembly of Saskatchewan from 1929 to 1934 as a Conservative.[3]

James Grassick
Member of the Legislative Assembly of Saskatchewan
In office
1929–1934
ConstituencyRegina City
Personal details
Born(1868-03-02)March 2, 1868
Fergus, Ontario
DiedAugust 4, 1956(1956-08-04) (aged 88)
Regina, Saskatchewan
Political partyConservative
Spouse(s)
Jessie Beattie
(
m. 1897)
OccupationBusinessman, politician

Biography

He was born in Fergus, Ontario, the son of George Grassick and Ann Jane Bell, both natives of Scotland, and moved to Manitoba with his parents in 1878. The family settled in Regina, Saskatchewan four years later. Grassick worked in the delivery business for a time before establishing the Capital Ice Company. He was also an agent for the Imperial Oil Company. In 1897, he married Jessie Beattie. Grassick served on Regina town council from 1900 to 1904 and was mayor from 1920 to 1922[1] and again from 1940 to 1941.[3]

He died when he was hit by a vehicle at the age of 88.[4] There are two parks and a street named in his honor in the city of Regina. There is also a lake in northern Saskatchewan named after him.[2]

His daughter Marion married Edward Cyril Malone.

gollark: The thing is that the GPU isn't really integrated into normal compute use very much, even when it could probably be used effectively.
gollark: Idea for an instruction set: x86-64 MOV, but no other instructions.
gollark: I guess so. ARM SoCs for phones already have the high/low-powered cores dichotomy.
gollark: I think what would be pretty good is having CPUs with a few high-single-thread-perf cores, like we have now, some lower-powered cores, and a lot of parallel processing ones (like GPUs).
gollark: ARM is improving *really* fast.

References

  1. Hawkes, John (1924). The story of Saskatchewan and its people. Volume 3. pp. 1728–29. Retrieved August 19, 2009.
  2. Russell, Peter A. "Grassick, James (1868–1956)". Encyclopedia of Saskatchewan. Retrieved August 19, 2009.
  3. Regina Ethnic Pioneers Cemetery Walking Tour Inc (2000). Regina Cemetery Walking Tour: Tour 1: City Founding Fathers (Blue Tour). p. 23. Retrieved August 19, 2009.
  4. "J. Grassick Dead; Struck by Auto". The StarPhoenix. Regina. CP. August 6, 1956. Retrieved July 19, 2020 via Newspapers.com.


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