Sally Merchant

Maria Margharita "Sally" Merchant (October 1, 1919 April 1, 2007) was a Saskatchewan television personality and political figure.[1] She was the only Liberal MLA elected to represent Saskatoon in the Legislative Assembly of Saskatchewan from 1964 to 1967. She did not seek re-election in 1967.

Life and career

She was born Maria Margharita Smith in Yorkton, Saskatchewan, the daughter of Vincent Smith, a Saskatchewan judge and former MLA for Yorkton. She received a B.A. from Dalhousie University and a B.Ed. from the University of Saskatchewan. In 1941, she married Captain Evatt Francis Anthony Merchant; he was killed in action during World War II. Her husband's brother was Robert Thomas Peter Merchant (1917–2011), a prominent Halifax businessman.[2]

She joined CFQC-TV (later CTV) in Saskatoon in 1955 and went on to host a television interview show known as Sally Time. From 1964 to 1967, she served as a Liberal MLA in the Saskatchewan legislature. In 1967, she was named to the Canadian delegation to the United Nations. She served in the federal Department of Consumer and Corporate Affairs from 1969 to 1983, and with the CRTC from 1983 to 1988. She lectured at the University of Alberta, the University of Manitoba and the University of Saskatchewan. She died in Saskatoon in April 2007.

Children

Her son Anthony "Tony" Merchant is a lawyer and served from 1975 to 1978 as a Liberal MLA in the Saskatchewan legislature. His wife, Pana Merchant, was a Liberal Senator for Saskatchewan from 2002 to 2017.

Her daughter Adrian Merchant married Donald Stovel Macdonald in 1988. From her prior marriage to Otto Lang, she had seven children: Maria (d. 1991), Timothy, Gregory, Andrew, Elisabeth, Adrian, and Amanda Lang.[3]

gollark: It's reacted with pure fluorine gas.
gollark: My milk is fluoridated.
gollark: Death.
gollark: Milk regular shower when?
gollark: 7.π.005

References

Legislative Assembly of Saskatchewan
Preceded by
Arthur T. Stone and Gladys Strum
Member of the Legislative Assembly for Saskatoon City
1964–1967
Served alongside: Alexander Malcolm Nicholson, John Edward Brockelbank, Wesley A. Robbins, and Harry D. Link
Riding abolished
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